(9 Jun 2004)
Sea Island
1. Wide shot of police at security check point
2. Mid shot of police car at road leading to summit parameters
3. More of police vehicles
4. Mid shot of Coast guard boat patrolling waters
5. Deep sea divers at boat
6. More of Coast Guard patrolling nearby waters
7. Wide shot of bridge leading to summit's area and coast guar patrolling waters
Savannah - 8 June
8. Pan from police on horses to protesters marching down street
9. Close up of protesters walking by
10. Front line of protest march rounding corner in road as they carry large sign
11. Police officer watching as protesters go by
12. Close up protester chanting into bullhorn
13. Group of police standing by road
14. Wide shot two police standing next to barricade setup at side of road
15. Four police on horses
16. Police officer carrying automatic weapon walking inside perimeter set up with barricade
17. Solider getting into humvee as it drives to gate to leave secure area
18. People showing their ID's as they walk into secure area through barricade
STORYLINE:
Security around Sea Island, Georgia on the south east coast of the United States was tight as leaders of the world's most powerful countries began arriving for a three day Group of Eight summit.
Throughout the day, heads of state arrived at an Army airfield on the mainland near Savannah and were taken by helicopter to Sea Island, an
eight-kilometre (five-mile) long private resort island that has been virtually sealed off by barricades and fences.
Although protesters have had a growing presence at the annual G-8 summits, police and media far outnumbered demonstrators on Tuesday.
Protest marches in Brunswick, the closed inland community near Sea Island, and Savannah, 130 kilometres (80 miles) to the north, drew only around 100 activists on Tuesday.
Hosting the meeting, an upbeat President George W. Bush believes a U.N. Security Council approval of a resolution recognising the new Iraqi interim government, expected later Tuesday, would be a "catalyst for change" in the region.
His national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, said Monday that the U.S. no longer expects the resolution to draw in additional troops, but hopes it will help countries with troops already in Iraq stay the course.
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