APTN 2330 PRIME NEWS AMERICAS
AP-APTN-2330 Americas L Prime News-Final
Saturday, 10 April 2010
Americas L Prime News
Russia Poland 8 02:23 No Access Poland/Russia
WRAP Russian PM visits crash site; Polish PM Tusk with Putin
Poland Mourning 8 04:04 No Access Poland
REPLAY People mourning outside presidential palace
Russia Coffins 01:30 No Access Poland
REPLAY Coffins bearing crash victims brought to airport
Colombia Poland 01:44 AP Television Clients Only
REPLAY Uribe comments on crash that killed Polish president
Haiti Relocation 02:23 AP Clients Only
REPLAY First set of displaced families relocated to camp, aid groups criticise plan
++US Church Abuse 02:30 AP Clients Only
NEW Woman alleges that priest Stephen Kiesle abused her as a child
Thailand Protest 9 05:04 Part No Access Thailand
WRAP GRAPHIC At least 15 dead in clashes, army sot, PM; injured
++Cuba Concert 02:30 AP Clients Only
NEW Concert held in the capital to honour Cuba's Revolution
B-u-l-l-e-t-i-n begins at 2330 GMT.
APEX 04-10-10 1956EDT
-----------End of rundown-----------
AP-APTN-2330: Russia Poland 8
Saturday, 10 April 2010
STORY:Russia Poland 8- WRAP Russian PM visits crash site; Polish PM Tusk with Putin
LENGTH: 02:23
FIRST RUN: 2130
RESTRICTIONS: No Access Poland/Russia
TYPE: Russian/Nat
SOURCE: TVP/Russia POOL
STORY NUMBER: 642608
DATELINE: Smolensk - 10 April 2010
LENGTH: 02:23
TVP - NO ACCESS POLAND
RUSSIA POOL - NO ACCESS RUSSIA
SHOTLIST
(FIRST RUN 2130 NEWS UPDATE - 10 APRIL 2010)
TVP - NO ACCESS POLAND
++NIGHT SHOTS++
1. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk and officials seated across the table from Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin
2. Close of Tusk
3. Wide of Tusk and Putin
4. Putin and Tusk listening to the news
5. Exterior of Putin and Tusk standing, surrounded by media
6. Tusk seated in his car
7. Mid of military and rescue workers at the crash site
8. Various of rescue teams at the site, debris scattered on ground
9. Close pan of plane wreckage
10. Wide of plane crash site and rescue teams
(FIRST RUN 1930 ASIA PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
RUSSIA POOL - NO ACCESS RUSSIA
++DAY SHOTS++
11. Putin disembarking plane, walks to Emergency Situations Minister Sergei Shoigu, shakes his hand
12. Various of Putin touring the crash site accompanied by Shoigu as well as the Russian Deputy Prime Minister and other officials
13. Various of crash investigation officials seated during news conference
14. SOUNDBITE: (Russian) Vladimir Putin, Russian Prime Minister:
"We need together to do everything possible to find out the reasons for this tragedy in the shortest possible time. That's the first task. The second is to help the relatives of those killed."
15. Crash investigation officials listening
STORYLINE
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk flew to Smolensk on Saturday to meet Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin for high-level talks after a plane crash killed Poland's president and dozens of the country's high-ranking military and political leaders.
Putin and Tusk were also briefed in a video conference by members of a special commission in Moscow, who told them that doctors, psychologists and other specialists were ready to assist relatives of the victims.
Polish President Lech Kaczynski and his wife Maria were killed along with at least 95 others when their plane crashed en route to a memorial service to mark the 70th anniversary of the killing of thousands of Polish officers and intellectuals by the Soviet secret security during World War II.
The purpose behind the journey, laid bare the deep divisions that remain between two nations still struggling to be more than uneasy neighbours who watch each other with suspicion.
In a show of solidarity, Tusk and Putin appeared before the cameras together as rescue teams worked to recover the bodies of those who died and to establish why the aging Russian carrier carrying Polish delegates crashed.
Putin personally took charge of the investigation and quickly offered condolences, along with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.
Poland called for two minutes of silence across the country on Sunday and declared a week of mourning. Medvedev declared Monday a day of mourning in Russia.
Televised scenes show Poles weeping before their TVs, flags lowered to half-staff and black ribbons taped in windows as the upper echelons of the establishment lay dead in woods a short drive from the site of the Katyn forest massacre, one of Poland's greatest national traumas.
Chunks of the plane were scattered widely amid leafless trees and small fires in woods shrouded with fog.
On board were the national bank president, deputy foreign minister, army chaplain, head of the National Security Office, deputy parliament speaker, Olympic Committee head, civil rights commissioner and at least two presidential aides and three lawmakers, the Polish foreign ministry said.
Earlier, Putin met with Emergency Situations Minister Sergei Shoigu and toured the crash site with Shoigu.
Putin vowed to do everything possible to discover the reason for the crash in the shortest possible time frame, and to help grieving relatives.
Early indications pointed to pilot error in heavy fog as a factor in the crash, officials said.
Both black boxes have been found. Preliminary data indicated that the plane hit the treetops as it was making the approach to the airport in poor visibility, the ITAR-Tass news agency quoted an official with the Russian general prosecutor's office as saying.
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
APTN
APEX 04-10-10 1927EDT
------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM -------------------
AP-APTN-2330: Poland Mourning 8
Saturday, 10 April 2010
STORY:Poland Mourning 8- REPLAY People mourning outside presidential palace
LENGTH: 04:04
FIRST RUN: 1930
RESTRICTIONS: No Access Poland
TYPE: Polish/Nat
SOURCE: TVN
STORY NUMBER: 642598
DATELINE: Various - 10 Apr 2010
LENGTH: 04:04
TVN - NO ACCESS POLAND
SHOTLIST:
(FIRST RUN 1930 ASIA PACIFIC PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
Lodz
1. Polish flag flying at half-mast
2. Man putting black ribbon on Lodz city flag
(FIRST RUN 1930 ASIA PACIFIC PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
Wroclaw
3. Municipal guards standing
4. Low shot of candles on the ground as tribute to those killed in the presidential plane crash
5. Tilt down from flags with black ribbons to municipal guards
6. Woman organising candles and flowers on the ground
(FIRST RUN 1930 ASIA PACIFIC PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
Krakow
7. Students walking, holding pictures of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, his wife and former president Ryszard Kaczorowski
8. Pan of people walking, some holding flags
9. Tilt down from cross candles on the ground
10. Pan of people gathered in square
11. People walking to lay flowers and candles
12. Low shot of mourners laying flowers
(FIRST RUN 1930 ASIA PACIFIC PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
Poznan
13. Various of people writing in memory book
(FIRST RUN 1930 ASIA PACIFIC PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
Warsaw
14. SOUNDBITE: (Polish) Bronislaw Komorowski, Speaker of Parliament and now Poland's acting President:
"According to the Article 131 of the Polish Constitution, the Speaker of Parliament is responsible for continuity of ruling the Polish State. I've signed the decree of the National Mourning, addressed to all institutions of the State of Poland."
(FIRST RUN 1930 ASIA PACIFIC PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
Poznan
15. Wide of people standing in front of Katyn monument
16. People praying in front of candles
17. Low shot of flowers and candles
(FIRST RUN 1930 ASIA PACIFIC PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
Szczecin
18. Low shot of candles positioned under the picture of President Kaczynski and flags
19. Man writing in a memory book
(FIRST RUN 1930 ASIA PACIFIC PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
Warsaw
20. SOUNDBITE (Polish) Aleksander Kwasniewski, former president of Poland:
"Each minute extended the drama and shock. As I used to say, we knew that the planes were old and should have been replaced long ago. Anyway, I didn't expect the tragedy would happen to this plane. This one has been maintained recently. In addition, as I say the place of the tragedy plays a significant role. They were heading to pay respect to thousands of murdered Polish officers, the elite of those days. They lost their lives by trying to reach the place to pay their respects. It is shocking and moving. It is a wound to the Polish political scene that will be healed with great difficulty."
(FIRST RUN 1930 ASIA PACIFIC PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
Poznan
21. Tilt up from people standing at candle vigil to monument
22. Men lighting candles
23. People placing lit candles on the ground
24. Large sign on building reading (in Polish): "Honour their memory"
25. Polish flags on building
(FIRST RUN 1630 EUROPE PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
Warsaw
26. Overhead shot of scenes outside presidential palace, with mourners gathering to place flowers and other tributes to those killed in the crash
27. National flag flying at half-mast on top of palace
28. People walking past flowers and candles outside presidential palace
(FIRST RUN 1530 NEWS UPDATE - 10 APRIL 2010)
Warsaw
29. Mourners adding to bed of flowers and candles outside presidential palace
30. Girl holding rose
31. Close up of candles and flowers
32. Various of mourners placing flowers and candles outside presidential palace
(FIRST RUN 1830 NORTH AMERICA PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
++NIGHT SHOTS++
Warsaw
33. Wide of square
(FIRST RUN 1930 ASIA PACIFIC PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
++NIGHT SHOTS++
Warsaw
34. Wide of cross surrounded by mourners at candle vigil
STORYLINE:
Poland's parliament speaker, who is now the acting president, declared a week of national mourning on Saturday after President Lech Kaczynski, his wife and some of the country's highest military and civilian leaders were killed when the presidential plane crashed in western Russia.
Russian and Polish officials said there were no survivors on the 26-year-old Tupolev, which was taking the president, his wife and staff to events marking the 70th anniversary of the massacre in Katyn forest of thousands of Polish officers by Soviet secret police.
Early indications pointed to pilot error in heavy fog as a factor in the crash, officials said.
The crash devastated the upper echelons of Poland's political and military establishments.
On board were the army chief of staff, the navy chief commander and heads of the air and land forces.
Also killed were the national bank president, deputy foreign minister, army chaplain, head of the national security office, deputy parliament speaker, Olympic Committee head, civil rights commissioner and at least two presidential aides and three lawmakers, the Polish foreign ministry said.
Poles wept before their televisions, lowered flags to half-staff and taped black ribbons in their windows after hearing that the upper echelons of the establishment lay dead in woods a short drive from the site of the Katyn forest massacre, one of Poland's greatest national traumas.
Thousands of people placed candles and flowers at the presidential palace in central Warsaw.
People gathered to lay flowers and light candles also in other cities across Poland as Prime Minister Donald Tusk flew to Smolensk from Warsaw.
Many called the crash Poland's worst disaster since World War II.
Poland has long discussed replacing the planes that carry the country's leaders but said they lacked the funds.
The presidential plane was fully overhauled in December, the general director of the Aviakor aviation maintenance plant in Samara, Russia told Rossiya-24.
He said there could be no doubts that the plane was flightworthy.
But Polish former president, Aleksander Kwasniewski said on Saturday that the planes "should have been replaced long ago".
He also said that the place of the crash played a "significant role" and called the tragedy "shocking and moving".
The president's twin brother, former Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski, headed to the area in a chartered plane along with relatives, according to his party.
Lech Kaczynski became president in December 2005 after defeating Tusk in that year's presidential vote.
The nationalist conservative had said he would seek a second term in presidential elections this autumn, though no date had been set.
However, the constitution says the parliament speaker, who took on the duties of president, must announce early elections within 14 days of the president's death.
The vote must be held within another 60 days.
This means Poland will be holding early presidential elections before June 20.
The crash also shocked Russia.
Sensing the depth of the tragedy for Poland, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin personally took charge of the investigation and very quickly and publicly offered condolences, along with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.
Medevedev declared Monday a day of mourning in Russia.
Poland called for two minutes of silence across the country Sunday and declared a week of mourning.
Polish-Russian relations had been improving recently after being poisoned for decades over the massacre of some 22,000 Polish officers in and around Katyn forest.
For half a century, Soviet officials claimed that the mass executions had been carried out by Nazi occupiers during the Second World War.
But the Soviet Union under Mikhail Gorbachev's rule admitted in 1990 that the crimes had been committed by Stalin's NKVD secret police.
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
APTN
APEX 04-10-10 1927EDT
------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM -------------------
AP-APTN-2330: Russia Coffins
Saturday, 10 April 2010
STORY:Russia Coffins- REPLAY Coffins bearing crash victims brought to airport
LENGTH: 01:30
FIRST RUN: 1830
RESTRICTIONS: No Access Poland
TYPE: Natsound
SOURCE: TVN
STORY NUMBER: 642595
DATELINE: Near Smolensk - 10 Apr 2010
LENGTH: 01:30
AP TELEVISION - AP Clients Only
SHOTLIST:
1. Wide shot of emergency workers carrying coffins containing bodies of crash victims to airport
2. Line of planes
3. Wide shot of emergency workers carrying coffins
4. Police vehicle entering airport
5. Wide shot of emergency workers carrying coffins
6. Trucks arriving at airport
7. Emergency workers putting coffins on back of truck
STORYLINE:
Coffins containing bodies of some of the 96 people killed when the Polish presidential plane crashed in western Russia were taken to the airport in Smolensk on Saturday.
Poland was in a state of mourning after President Lech Kaczynski, his wife and some of the country's highest military and civilian leaders died.
The bodies were to be taken to Moscow for identification, Russian television reported.
In Warsaw, Prime Minister Donald Tusk called an extraordinary meeting of his cabinet and the national flag was lowered to half-staff at the presidential palace, where people gathered to lay flowers and light candles.
Tusk also led a two-minute silence at noon local time (1000 GMT) on Sunday to mourn the deaths of the 96 people on board the plane.
Poland's parliament speaker, the acting president, declared a week of national mourning. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Saturday also announced a day of mourning.
Russian and Polish officials said there were no survivors on the 26-year-old Tupolev, which was taking the president, his wife and staff to events marking the 70th anniversary of the massacre of thousands of Polish officers by Soviet secret police.
The crash devastated the upper echelons of Poland's political and military establishments.
On board were the army chief of staff, national bank president, deputy foreign minister, army chaplain, head of the national security office, deputy parliament speaker, civil rights commissioner and at least two presidential aides and three lawmakers, the Polish foreign ministry said.
It was not expected to directly affect the functioning of Polish government, however: the president is commander in chief of its armed forces but the position's domestic duties are chiefly symbolic.
The presidential plane was headed for a military airport, North Smolensk, located near an aviation plant, when it came down in heavy fog.
A spokesman for the Smolensk regional government said Russian dispatchers had asked the crew to land in either Minsk, the capital of neighbouring Belarus, or in Moscow because of the fog but that the crew had decided otherwise.
Kaczynski is the first serving Polish leader to die since exiled World War II-era leader General Wladyslaw Sikorski in a plane crash off Gibraltar in 1943.
The 60-year-old became president in December 2005 after defeating Tusk in that year's presidential vote.
The nationalist conservative was the twin brother of Poland's opposition leader, former Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski.
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
APTN
APEX 04-10-10 1937EDT
------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM -------------------
AP-APTN-2330: Colombia Poland
Saturday, 10 April 2010
STORY:Colombia Poland- REPLAY Uribe comments on crash that killed Polish president
LENGTH: 01:44
FIRST RUN: 2030
RESTRICTIONS: AP Television Clients Only
TYPE: Spanish/Nat
SOURCE: See Script
STORY NUMBER: 642599
DATELINE: Sincelejo - 10 April 2010
LENGTH: 01:44
GOVERNMENT TELEVISION - AP TELEVISION CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST:
1. Wide of town hall meeting
2. Orchestra playing Colombia's national anthem at the meeting with President of Colombia Alvaro Uribe
3. Uribe and other delegates standing while listening to Colombia's anthem
4. Uribe singing Colombia's anthem
5. People sitting at the town hall meeting
6. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Alvaro Uribe, President of Colombia:
"I want to express the Polish people and their authorities our most deep voice of condolence because of the dead in a plane accident hours ago, of President Lech Kaczynski, his wife Maria and a select delegation of the government of Poland and its armed forces. To the big nation of Poland, we want to keep you company in this hour of tragedy so they can feel the affection of Colombians and I invite all of you to hold a minute of silence as an expression of affection with the nationals of Poland as well as solidarity in this hour of mourning."
7. Uribe standing while keeping a minute of silence
8. Pan left of people standing and keeping a minute of silence
9. People standing and keeping a minute of silence
STORYLINE:
Alvaro Uribe, President of Colombia, expressed condolences to Polish authorities on Saturday after a plane crash killed Polish President Lech Kaczynski, his wife and some of the country's highest military officers and civilian leaders.
Russia's Emergency Ministry said there were 97 dead, 88 in the Polish state delegation.
Early indications pointed to pilot error in heavy fog as a factor in the crash, officials said.
The aging Russian airliner carrying carrying the President crashed in thick fog as it took them to a ceremony marking the 70th anniversary of the slaughter of thousands of Polish military officers by Soviet secret police.
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
APTN
APEX 04-10-10 1927EDT
------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM -------------------
AP-APTN-2330: Haiti Relocation
Saturday, 10 April 2010
STORY:Haiti Relocation- REPLAY First set of displaced families relocated to camp, aid groups criticise plan
LENGTH: 02:23
FIRST RUN: 2030
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only
TYPE: Eng/Creole/Nat
SOURCE: AP TELEVISION
STORY NUMBER: 642609
DATELINE: Port-au-Prince - 10 April 2010
LENGTH: 02:23
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST
1. Top shot of line of people waiting
2. Various of people waiting in line
3. SOUNDBITE (Creole) Ernest Belfort, camp resident:
"Yes, I have to go, if it's going to be better for me I have to go."
4. NGO workers registering people for relocation, zoom in on paper cards in woman's hand
5. Various of camp residents carrying their belongings
6. Various of families waiting in tent
7. Close of children waiting
8. United Nations soldier directing residents
9. Set-up of US actor Sean Penn speaking with member of relocation team
10. SOUNDBITE (English) Sean Penn, US actor:
"It's as urgent as the next big rain. You know, by big rain, at this point the Navy Seabees have done an extraordinary job in a heavy one night rain. We don't think we would have life loss, you know, in terms of the dynamics of the place, in terms the general nature of it. Most of that draining has been achieved, but we still have areas, for example draining ditches that are wide open, and without light at all in many cases. So, these are still highly dangerous areas."
11. NGO worker directing residents on to bus
12. Residents being led by NGO worker to bus
13. People sitting in bus
14. Convoy leaving camp
STORYLINE
The first earthquake-stricken residents of a sprawling tent city around the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince were moved from their temporary homes on Saturday and relocated to more permanent refugee camps on safer ground.
International aid agencies, in coordination with the Haitian Government, moved 95 residents from vulnerable areas of the Petionville Golf Club, where some 45-thousand homeless refugees live in makeshift shelters, to a camp in Bois de Bouquet, north of the capital.
The effort, led by the Jenkins-Penn Haitian Relief Organisation, an NGO founded in part by American actor Sean Penn, hopes to move five-thousand residents of the low-lying camp by the end of next week.
But some critics in the international aid community, and independent Haitian relief groups, say the move is too little too late.
The government of President Rene Preval has been warned for months by these groups of the urgency of moving refugees from low-lying areas in the capital before the beginning of the rainy season.
That season is in its first stages, with heavy rain hitting the capital two nights in a row during the preceding week.
On Wednesday, a windy 20-minute downpour left a half foot of water inside makeshift tents on the sloping golf course of the Petionville Club.
The rains turned the camp at the golf course into a sea of viscous mud and fast running water, flooding some tents in the more vulnerable areas of the tent city.
The Haitian government has been struggling to come up with a plan for the roughly 75-thousand people still living in camps at the golf course, the Champ de Mars, a central plaza in front of the destroyed Presidential Palace, and various parks and open areas around the city.
Many residents say they don't want to move because they fear being isolated from family, jobs or relief aid.
Some, however, are willing to make the move.
"I have to go, if it's going to be better for me I have to go," said one man waiting in line to register with the J/P HRO.
Belfort added he feared for his and his family's safety after the last two nights of rainfall.
The re-settlement camp at Bois de Bouquet is located some 20 miles north of the capital, far from the destroyed homes of the residents of the camp in Petionville.
But it has potable water, the ground has been graded to avoid flooding, layered with gravel to allow water to drain, sanitation and more sturdy living quarters.
Although those conditions are far better than the ones these people currently live in, experts say the new camp is vulnerable to tropical storms, or worse, hurricanes, leaving the problem of solving the housing crisis for so many people a major challenge for the Haitian government.
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
APTN
APEX 04-10-10 1928EDT
------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM -------------------
AP-APTN-2330: ++US Church Abuse
Saturday, 10 April 2010
STORY:++US Church Abuse- NEW Woman alleges that priest Stephen Kiesle abused her as a child
LENGTH: 02:30
FIRST RUN: 2330
RESTRICTIONS: See Script
TYPE: English/Nat
SOURCE: Various
STORY NUMBER: 642607
DATELINE: Various - 4/8/9/10 April 2010/File
LENGTH: 02:30
++CLIENTS PLEASE NOTE AMENDED SOURCES++
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
LAW ENFORCEMENT HANDOUT - AP CLIENTS ONLY
CTV - AP CLIENTS ONLY
AP PHOTOS - NO ACCESS CANADA/ FOR BROADCAST USE ONLY - STRICTLY NO ACCESS ONLINE OR MOBILE
AP PHOTOS/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP - MANDATORY COURTESY BAY AREA NEWS GROUP / NO ACCESS CANADA/ FOR BROADCAST USE ONLY - STRICTLY NO ACCESS ONLINE OR MOBILE
SHOTLIST
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
San Diego, California, USA - 10 April 2010
1. Set up of Anne (she identified herself by her first name only), alleged church abuse victim, walking with her lawyer Irwin Zalkin
2. SOUNDBITE (English) Anne (surname not given), allegedly abused by defrocked priest Reverend Stephen Kiesle:
"I was right around seven years old and there was more than one incident. And I can't go into what he did to me, because it literally makes me physically ill. What I can say is use your imagination and I guarantee you it is worse than anything you can imagine."
(Q: This was in a church?)
"Absolutely, yes, it was in the church. It was in the church, it was in the rectory, yes."
(Q: Was this in the diocese of Oakland?)
"Yes it was, it was at St. Paula Parish in Freemont, California, which has since been renamed."
(Q: And he was a deacon?)
"He was a deacon at that time."
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Los Angeles, California, USA - 9 April 2010
3. Wide of 1985 letter written by then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, to the Diocese of Oakland, zoom in on Ratzinger's signature
4. Close of Ratzinger's signature
LAW ENFORCEMENT HANDOUT - AP CLIENTS ONLY
FILE: Date and location unknown
5. STILL of defrocked priest Reverend Stephen Kiesle
CTV - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Vatican City - 4 April 2010
6. Pope Benedict XVI emerging on balcony of St. Peter's Basilica on Easter Sunday and waving to pilgrims
AP PHOTOS - NO ACCESS CANADA/ FOR BROADCAST USE ONLY - STRICTLY NO ACCESS ONLINE OR MOBILE
FILE: Vatican City - 12 December 1985
7. STILL of Ratzinger holding up book at news conference at the Vatican, zoom in
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
San Diego, California, USA - 10 April 2010
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Anne (surname not given), allegedly abused by defrocked priest Reverend Stephen Kiesle:
"The hierarchy is not being fair to the people of the Catholic faith. And they're doing them a great disservice. If they would just for once and for all open the books, come clean, tell the truth so we can all move on I think it would be better for everyone. And Cardinal Ratzinger or Pope Benedict if you're watching this do the right thing for once, please. You know the whole world is watching, I'm watching and if you want any chance at saving the Catholic church you need to do something and you need to do it now. It's long overdue, victims have been waiting for years and decades, we have victims who have killed themselves because they can't handle what's happened to them and because they have felt so alone. Are you going to let another person, are you going to lose another soul?"
AP PHOTOS/BAY AREA NEWS GROUP - MANDATORY COURTESY BAY AREA NEWS GROUP / NO ACCESS CANADA/ FOR BROADCAST USE ONLY - STRICTLY NO ACCESS ONLINE OR MOBILE
FILE: Martinez, California, USA - 24 July 2003
9. STILL of Stephen Kiesle during a court hearing
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Union City, California, USA - 8 April 2010
++NIGHT SHOTS++
10. Exterior of Our Lady of the Rosary parish school, where Kiesle pleaded no contest to molesting two boys
11. Mid of cross on top of the school
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Pinole, California, USA - 9 April 2010
12. Various of exteriors of St. Joseph's Church, where Kiesle volunteered as a youth minister
13. Statue of Joseph holding baby Jesus
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
San Diego, California, USA - 10 April 2010
14. SOUNDBITE (English) Anne (surname not given), allegedly abused by defrocked priest Reverend Stephen Kiesle:
"This guy is a monster, he's a serial predator. And I am at a loss as to how anybody could find any part of that whether canon law, judicial law, any type of law, how they could find that in any way acceptable. It's always been wrong to hurt a child. I don't care who's laws you're talking about."
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Vatican City - 4 April 2010
15. Bells tolling at St. Peter's Basilica
CTV - AP CLIENTS ONLY
Vatican City - 4 April 2010
16. Top shot St. Peter's square filled with pilgrims
STORYLINE
A woman who has alleged in a lawsuit that former California priest Stephen Kiesle sexually abused her as a child reacted angrily on Saturday to a 1985 letter signed by then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, that cited concerns about the effect that removing the priest would have on "the good of the universal church."
Church files obtained exclusively by the Associated Press show that before becoming Pope, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger resisted defrocking a San Francisco Bay-area priest who molested children.
The correspondence is the strongest challenge yet to the Vatican's insistence that Pope Benedict XVI played no role in blocking the removal of paedophile priests during his years as head of the Catholic Church's doctrinal watchdog office.
The letter, signed by Ratzinger, was typed in Latin and is part of years of correspondence between the Diocese of Oakland in California and the Vatican about the proposed defrocking of the Reverend Stephen Kiesle.
The woman said it seemed the Vatican was more concerned with the scandal than protecting children.
She identified herself by her first name only, Anne, during a news conference in San Diego with her attorney.
The Associated Press generally does not identify victims of alleged sexual abuse, however, Anne has chosen to speak publicly about her experience.
On Saturday, she pleaded to the Pope: "Do the right thing, for once. Please. The whole world is watching. I'm watching. And if you want any chance at saving the Catholic church you need to do something and you need to do it now."
She said Kiesle allegedly abused her at the age of seven at a church in the Oakland diocese.
"This guy is a monster, a serial predator," Anne said. "I am at a loss as to how anybody could find any part of that whether canon law, judicial law, any type of law, how they could find that in any way acceptable."
"I can't go into what he did to me, because it literally makes me physically ill. What I can say is use your imagination and I guarantee you it is worse than anything you can imagine," she added.
Even in his seminary days in the early 1970s, there were questions about Kiesle. Colleagues said he had trouble relating to adults, lacked spirituality and didn't seem committed to anything but youth ministry.
Those colleagues, who helped make the case to the Vatican in 1981 seeking to let him leave the priesthood, said they were concerned before Kiesle was ordained, and more so after revelations Kiesle had molested children in his parish.
Still, future Pope Benedict XVI resisted pleas from the diocese to act on the case, according to a 1985 letter in Latin obtained by The Associated Press that bore his signature as then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger.
It would take another two years before the Vatican doctrine watchdog office headed by Ratzinger would approve Kiesle's own request to leave the priesthood in 1987.
Vatican attorney Jeffrey Lena said the matter proceeded "expeditiously, not by modern standards, but by those standards at the time."
Kiesle pleaded no contest in 1978 to lewd conduct for tying up and molesting two boys and was sentenced to three years probation.
He took a leave of absence from his parish position, and in 1981 returned and asked the Oakland bishop to be laicised, or removed from the priesthood.
In building a case to laicise Kiesle, the Reverend George Mockel of the Oakland Diocese asked priests who had worked with Kiesle to share their opinions of his time in seminary and work in the priesthood after being ordained in 1972.
California church officials wrote to Ratzinger at least three times to check on the status of Kiesle's case.
John Cummins, former bishop in the Diocese of Oakland, discussed the case with officials during a Vatican visit, according to correspondence obtained by AP.
At one point, a Vatican official wrote to say the file may have been lost and suggested resubmitting materials.
As Kiesle's fate was being weighed in Rome, the priest returned to suburban Pinole to volunteer as a youth minister at St. Joseph Church.
He was eventually defrocked in 1987.
Kiesle, who married after leaving the priesthood, was arrested and charged in 2002 with 13 counts of child molestation from the 1970s.
All but two were thrown out after the US Supreme Court struck down a California law extending the statute of limitations.
He pleaded no contest in 2004 to a felony for molesting a young girl in his home in 1995 and was sentenced to six years in state prison.
Now 63 and a registered sex offender, Kiesle lives in a Walnut Creek gated community, according to his address listed on a sex offender registry.
An AP reporter was turned away when attempting to reach him. William Gagen, an attorney who represented Kiesle in 2002, has not returned repeated calls seeking comment.
More than a half-dozen victims reached a settlement in 2005 with the Oakland diocese alleging Kiesle had molested them as young children.
Only the Vatican can approve removing someone from the priesthood, whether it is requested by the priest or his superiors.
At the time of Kiesle's petition, a variety of Vatican offices handled them. In 2001, Ratzinger required all cases involving abuse claims to go through his office, streamlining the process.
Cummins said he believed Ratzinger was following what was the practice of the time, and "that the Pope John Paul was slowing these things down."
In the November 1985 letter, Ratzinger says the arguments for removing Kiesle were of "grave significance" but such actions required very careful review and more time.
Lena, the Vatican attorney, said Ratzinger's instruction to offer Kiesle "paternal care" was a way of telling the bishop he was responsible for keeping Kiesle out of trouble.
Lena said Kiesle was not accused of any child abuse in the five years it took for the Vatican to act on the laicisation.
A Vatican spokesman, the Reverend Ciro Benedettini, said the letter showed no attempt at a cover up.
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
APTN
APEX 04-10-10 2048EDT
------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM -------------------
AP-APTN-2330: Thailand Protest 9
Saturday, 10 April 2010
STORY:Thailand Protest 9- WRAP GRAPHIC At least 15 dead in clashes, army sot, PM; injured
LENGTH: 05:04
FIRST RUN: 1930
RESTRICTIONS: Part No Access Thailand
TYPE: Thai/English/Natsound
SOURCE: AP TELEVISION/TNN/TPBS
STORY NUMBER: 642597
DATELINE: Bangkok - 10 Apr 2010
LENGTH: 05:04
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
TNN - NO ACCESS THAILAND
TPBS - NO ACCESS THAILAND
++CLIENTS NOTE: THIS EDIT CONTAINS GRAPHIC MATERIAL++
SHOTLIST:
++NIGHT SHOTS++
(FIRST RUN 1630 EUROPE PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
++UPSOUND OF MUSIC - BEING USED BY ARMY TO TRY AND CALM PROTESTERS++
1. Wide of protesters clashing with soldiers, injured protester falls to ground, AUDIO: Gunfire
2. Soldiers retreating, pull out to show fire burning in road, zoom in to show soldiers moving away, flash and sparks, AUDIO: Explosion
3. Injured soldiers being pulled along ground by other soldiers (extent of their injuries unclear)
(FIRST RUN 1630 EUROPE PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
TNN - NO ACCESS THAILAND
4. SOUNDBITE: (Thai) Col Sansern Kaewkamnerd, Army Spokesman:
"The security forces have now retreated, to a certain extent, from the Red Shirts. We hope that once the Red Shirt leaders inform and coordinate with the protesters, the protesters will retreat as well."
(FIRST RUN 1630 EUROPE PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
5. Various of men in civilian clothes carrying weapons
6. Pan from tourists taking photographs to protesters
7. Tourists walking through protest area
8. Injured protester being put on stretcher (extent of his injuries unclear)
9. Protester being wheeled on stretcher to ambulance
(FIRST RUN 1830 NORTH AMERICA PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
TPBS - No Access Thailand
10. Wide of Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva appearing on TV address
11. SOUNDBITE (Thai) Abhisit Vejjajiva, Thai Prime Minister:
"I want to show my regret to the people, for the loss that happened today, especially to the families of those who were killed in this incident tonight."
(FIRST RUN 1930 ASIA PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
12. Wide pan of dead body being carried out of ambulance and into BMA (Bangkok Metropolitan Administration) General Hospital
13. Wide of body carried into hospital room
14. Wide pan of another dead body being carried out of ambulance and into BMA Hospital
15. Close up of hospital worker's hand blocking camera lens and shutting door after dead body carried into hospital
16. Wide shot inside Hua Chiew Hospital with injured protestors on stretchers
17. Mid of injured protester sitting up on stretcher
18. Close up of face of injured protester
19. Wide of another injured protester lying on stretcher
20. Close up of face of injured protester lying on stretcher
21. Mid of bandage on leg of Vinai Ditajohn, injured photojournalist, and pan up to him lying on bed at BMA General Hospital
22. SOUNDBITE (English) Vinai Ditajohn, Thai, injured photojournalist:
"When he looked at my leg, he said this is not a rubber bullet, this is a real bullet."
23. Wide of Vinai Ditajohn lying on bed
24. SOUNDBITE (English) Dr Pijaya Nagavajara, Director, BMA General Hospital:
"Yes, one reporter was shot by the high velocity, we think that it is a bullet. The wound is at his left leg, the inside wound is very small, the outside wound is very big, theoretically it should be a bullet."
25. Mid of protestors carrying away an injured protester during clashes
26. Close up of injured protester's leg hanging down as protestors carry the injured protester away during clashes
27. Wide of protesters attacking army car with sticks
28. Mid pan of protesters leading away soldier from car
(FIRST RUN 1630 EUROPE PRIME NEWS - 10 APRIL 2010)
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
29. Monks and protesters praying next to body of dead protester
30. Tilt up of monk praying next to body
31. Relatives of dead protester crying over body
STORYLINE:
A crackdown on anti-government protesters in Thailand's capital on Saturday left at least 15 people dead and more than 650 injured, with no progress toward ending a monthlong standoff with demonstrators demanding new elections.
It was the worst violence in Bangkok since more than four dozen people were killed in an antimilitary protest in 1992. Bullet casings, rocks and pools of blood littered the streets where pitched battles raged for hours.
Army troops later retreated and asked protesters to do the same, resulting in an unofficial truce.
Four soldiers and 11 civilians, including a Japanese cameraman, were killed, according to the government's Erawan emergency centre.
The fighting erupted after security forces tried to push out demonstrators who have been staging a month of disruptive protests demanding that Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajva dissolve Parliament and call new elections.
The demonstrations are part of a long-running battle between the mostly poor and rural supporters of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, and the ruling elite they say orchestrated the 2006 military coup that removed him from power on corruption allegations.
The protesters, called "Red Shirts" for their garb, see the Oxford-educated Abhisit as a symbol of an elite impervious to the plight of Thailand's poor and claim he took office illegitimately in December 2008 after the military pressured Parliament to vote for him.
Saturday's violence and failure to dislodge the protesters are likely to make it harder to end the political deadlock.
Previously, both sides had exercised considerable restraint.
Abhisit went on national television shortly before midnight to pay condolences to the families of victims and indirectly assert that he would not bow to the protesters' demands.
"I want to show my regret to the people, for the loss that happened today, especially to the families of those who were killed in this incident tonight," Abhisit said.
The army had vowed to clear the protesters out of one of their two bases in Bangkok by nightfall, but the push instead set off street fighting.
There was a continuous sound of gunfire and explosions, mostly from Molotov cocktails. After more than two hours of fierce clashes, the soldiers pulled back.
Army spokesman Col. Sansern Kaewkamnerd went on television to ask the protesters to retreat as well. He also accused them of firing live rounds and throwing grenades.
An APTN cameraman saw two Red Shirt security guards carrying assault rifles.
At least 678 people were injured, according to the Erawan emergency centre. The deaths included Japanese cameraman Hiro Muramoto, who worked for Thomson Reuters news agency.
In a statement, Reuters said he was shot in the chest.
A Thai photojournalist, Vinai Ditajohn, was shot in the leg, seemingly by a live round. "The inside wound is very small, the outside wound is very big, theoretically it should be a bullet," doctor Pijaya Nagavajara said.
Most of the fighting took place around Democracy Monument, but spread to the Khao San Road area, a favourite of foreign backpackers.
Soldiers made repeated charges to clear the Red Shirts, while some tourists stood by watching. Two protesters and a Buddhist monk with them were badly beaten by soldiers and taken away by ambulance.
A Japanese tourist who was wearing a red shirt was also clubbed by soldiers until bystanders rescued him.
Thai media reported that several soldiers were captured by the protesters. Red Shirts also staged protests in several other provinces, seizing the provincial hall in the northern city of Chiang Mai, Thaksin's hometown.
On Friday, the police and army failed to prevent demonstrators from breaking into the compound of a
satellite transmission station and briefly restarting a pro-Red Shirt television station that had been shut down by
the government under a state of emergency.
The humiliating rout raised questions about how much control Abhisit has over the police and army.
Arrest warrants have been issued for 27 Red Shirt leaders, but none is known to have been taken into custody.
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
APTN
APEX 04-10-10 1958EDT
------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM -------------------
AP-APTN-2330: ++Cuba Concert
Saturday, 10 April 2010
STORY:++Cuba Concert- NEW Concert held in the capital to honour Cuba's Revolution
LENGTH: 02:30
FIRST RUN: 2330
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only
TYPE: Spanish/Nat
SOURCE: AP TELEVISION
STORY NUMBER: 642606
DATELINE: Havana - 10 April 2010
LENGTH: 02:30
AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY
SHOTLIST
1. Zoom out from sign reading (Spanish): "All for the Revolution" to the music venue with some audience members leaving
2. Zoom out from policemen to audience members
3. Various of audience walking around, watching concert
4. Wide of musicians on stage, with the US Interests Section and Cuban flags in the background
5. Mid of Cuban intellectuals and artists seated in the front row
6. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Silvio Rodriguez, Cuban singer:
"If a hunger striker demands that (US President Barack) Obama lift the blockade, would the Prisa Group (referring to the Spanish media group who own the El Pais newspaper and Cadena SER radio) support it? If the thousands of Cubans who lost family members because of attempts by the CIA would write a letter denouncing it, would Carlos Alberto Montaner (a Cuba dissident living in Spain) sign it?"
7. Zoom out from Amaury Perez, a Cuban singer, singing and saying "Viva Cuba"
8. Wide of the venue and audience
9. Mid of people leaving
STORYLINE
A surprisingly small crowd sang along to performances by top Cuban rock, folks and salsa stars on Saturday, in what the Communist government had billed as a politically important "concert for the homeland."
State-controlled media said the concert would prove Cuba's artists and intellectuals supported the government.
But instead of the thousands who usually jam the plaza for free concerts, the crowd number was estimated at 1,400.
Organisers had said the show would be headlined by Cuba's most famous folk singer, Silvio Rodriguez.
But instead, the pro-Castro government activist made fans wait for an hour in the unrelenting afternoon heat before reading a letter defending the single-party Communist system with a series of questions.
Rodriguez denounced Washington's 48-year-old trade embargo against Cuba, which officials blame for nearly all the country's problems.
The 63-year-old singer then left, replaced by other artists of the group "Nueva Trova," who mix folk music and pro-Castro politics.
President Raul Castro has led Cuba since the rule of his brother Fidel Castro from 1959 to 2008.
Many in the audience drifted away, missing later performances by other top musicians and bands, as well as poetry read by Cuban film stars.
The show was staged amidst international criticism over Cuba's human rights record, which the Cuban state-run media claimed was led by governments in the US and Europe to demonise Cuba.
International pressure on Cuba regarding human rights mounted after the death in February of dissident Orlando Zapata Tamayo, the first Cuban opposition figure in nearly four decades to die after refusing food.
The concert was held at the "Anti-imperialist Plaza," an open-air amphitheatre built beside the so-called "US Interests Section," which Washington operates instead of an embassy in Havana.
The US and Cuba have no formal diplomatic relations.
Cuban artists also staged a "Concert for the Homeland" in Santiago de Cuba to reaffirm the right of Cubans to defend their sovereignty.
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
APTN
APEX 04-10-10 2023EDT
------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM -------------------