(8 Jul 2005) SHOTLIST
1. Various morning of Tower Bridge
2. London Bridge station
3. People walking
4. People getting onto buses
5. Various interior shots of Liverpool Street station
6. Heavy police presence
7. People getting off trains in Liverpool Street
8. SOUNDBITE: (English) Vox Pop, Londoner:
"I must admit I went to bed last night feeling like I didn't want to work today and I got up this morning feeling like I didn't want to travel today but you've just got to get on with it really."
9. SOUNDBITE: (English) Vox Pop, Londoner:
"I don't know. I think Londoners are a bit resilient really and commuters will carry on."
10. SOUNDBITE: (English) Vox Pop Londoner:
"(I am) working as normal. Carrying on. Not being beaten. I worked for Cantor Fitzgerald (a New York bank) at the time of the 9/11 disaster and it all brought it back with what they went through. It was our turn yesterday. Fortunately, I was in at work early and that saved us this time."
11. People buying newspapers
12. Newspaper headlines
13. Various shots of newspaper stands
14. Aldgate station
15. Emergency vehicles at station
16. Sign for ALDGATE station
17. Police helicopter in sky over Aldgate Station
18. Sign: road closed
19. Police directing traffic
STORYLINE:
London commuters ventured warily back onto the capital's buses and into tube stations on Friday, but traffic was lighter than usual with many opting to stay home rather than use the transportation network the day after the worst peacetime attack in the city's history.
London's Metropolitan Police said 37 people were killed and about 700 injured in Thursday's bloody, coordinated attack.
Much of the London Underground had restored service.
Double-decker buses were also operational, but carried just a handful of people. Many tube stations and roads were almost empty.
Police were stationed in and outside several stations, carefully watching passing commuters.
Tube stations opened at the usual time, around 5:30 a.m. (0430 GMT), and trains were running normally on many of the system's 12 lines.
Buses were running on their usual routes, with some diversions around blast sites.
LONDON TERRORIST ATTACKS
The series of four explosions - three on subway cars and one on a double-decker bus - prompted authorities to shut down the Underground system completely on Thursday, stranding thousands of residents and commuters.
Many of London's 8 (m) million residents rely heavily on the network, and the closures forced thousands to walk or struggle to find a cab.
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