(19 Oct 2002)
1. Wide of bombed out deserted street
2. Procession of mourners carrying floral wreaths and candles
3. Wide of people paying their respects in front of floral tributes
4. Various close-ups of women praying and crying
5. Cutaway to candles
6. People standing in silent tribute
7. Wide of floral arrangements
8. Shot of crowd in front of candles
9. SOUNDBITE: (Bahasa) Cok Abi, local resident:
"From the moment I entered this site my body started to shiver and shake. I can't describe my feelings they are all mixed up. Looking at this site at this very moment I can't imagine what it was like when this tragedy happened."
10. Wide of Buddhist monk praying
11. Buddhists chanting in prayer
12. Cutaway to wreath
13. SOUNDBITE: (English) Brant Chapman, Australian bomb blast survivor
"Basically I just wanted to pay my respects to the victims of the blast, victims from all over the world and I just wanted to come down and have my moment here. I was quite close to the blast, just about 45 metres from the blast last week and I consider myself extremely lucky so that's why I came down to pay my respects."
14. Various of women putting flowers on the ground
15. Focus pull on flowers
16. Wide of floral tributes
STORYLINE:
More than one hundred people gathered outside the Sahri club in Kuta on Saturday night, exactly a week after two bombs tore through Bali's nightclub district killing at least 183 people and injuring 300 others, mostly foreign tourists.
The streets of Kuta were nearly deserted as the sad procession made its way to the blast-zone to pay their respects at the approximate time last week when the bombs were detonated. The area would normally be packed with young holiday makers.
The ceremony to mark the week-long anniversary was a sombre affair with whispered prayers and floral tributes laid at the spot where dozens of international visitors had died.
The multi-faith memorial attracted Buddhist rituals, Hindu offerings and Christian prayers for the dead. Many of those who narrowly cheated death also returned to pay their respects.
On Saturday Indonesian authorities arrested the alleged spiritual leader of a militant Islamic group suspected in last week's bombings and blamed the attack on al-Qaida and its allies in Southeast Asia.
Defense Minister Matori Abdul Djalil stated in the most specific claim yet by Indonesian authorities that the
cleric, Abu Bakar Bashir, was allegedly linked to al-Qaida and that his right-hand man, known as Hambali, was behind many of the country's terrorist bombings.
Matori stopped short of accusing Bashir of organising the Bali attacks, but said that he believed it was logical to believe that Hambali, whose real name is Riduan Isamuddin, helped orchestrate them and that Bashir knew about them.
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