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Instant Library 2002 |
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World News Review of 2002
Story No.: G00191
Restrictions:
Duration:
Source: APTN
Dateline: Various - throughout 2002
Date: 05/06/2004 07:43 PM
Shotlist
World News Review 2002
00:00 Titles
Terrorism
10:00:30
Bali bomb
In October, terrorists with suspected links to Al Qaida struck in the heart of Indonesia's tourist centre, setting off two enormous bombs outside two busy nightclubs. More than 180 people, many of them Australians, were killed. Dozens were injured
Following the blast, the popular Sari club and other nightspots around it were a mass of smouldering ruins. Witnesses described scenes of terror immediately after the explosion in the town of Kuta. Bloodied survivors fled the club, some with limbs blown off. Cars and motorbikes on the road in front were alight, forming a wall of flames blocking people's escape.
For the first time, Indonesia's government acknowledged Al Qaida was active on its soil, prompting a huge crackdown on extremists.
A week after the bombing, family and friends of those who died joined in a memorial service near the site of the blast. Relatives took the opportunity to survey the damage, stopping to pray in front of the hundreds of flowers left in memory of those who died.
APTN
Kuta, Bali
13/10/2002
Night shots -
Pull out burning building
Various shots of corpses
Firemen with hose
Various shots of burnt out cars with blackened corpses
Various shots of corpses
Various shots rescue workers remove body
Pan burnt out vehicles
Day shots
Various shots burning buildings
Zoom in burnt arm hanging our of car window
Two shots of bomb/fire damaged buildings
Various aerials of the blast site
Wide shot through wreckage of firefighters spraying water at smoking remains of building
Area destroyed by blast and fire
Various shots of emergency workers carrying Western woman on stretcher
(in hospital) SOUNDBITE (English) Ryan James (16), Injured holiday maker from Sydney
"I was in the club, the Sari club, we heard a loud noise, an explosion and then we turned round to see what it was and then before we could say anything there was another huge explosion right next to us and I was on the ground."
Tilt down wall register of patients in hospital
20/10/2002
Various people walking around bomb wreckage before memorial service for victims of the bombing
People praying in front of flowered shrine
SOUNDBITE (English) Rob Lewis, Father of victim
"A lot of different mixed emotions running through me. Anger, sadness - words just can't explain it, you know. I lost my son over there. Sorry man."
10:03:39
The Faces of Indonesian Terrorism
The Bali bombings threw the spotlight on Indonesia's main fundamentalist Islamic group, Jemaah Islamiyah. APTN obtained pictures of fighters from the group in training - alongside members of the Abu Sayyaf guerrilla group which operates in the Philippines In an interview, the man said to be the leader of Jemaah Islamiyah, Abu Dakar Bashir, spoke out strongly against the United States.
APTN
Indonesia, 2001 (exact date and location unknown)
Lines of Jemaah Islamiyah fighters marching with weapons
Fighters stepping on each others bodies
Fighters watch martial arts demonstration
Cianjur, West Java, 23 September, 2002
Alleged leader of Jemaah Islamiyah, Abu Dakar Bashir reading magazine
SOUNDBITE (Bahasa Indonesia) Abu Dakar Bashir, alleged leader of Jemaah Islamiyah
"My message to Americans is to warn their arrogant government. The current American president is the worst American president ever. The actions of the American government at the moment may bring harm to the American people."
10:04:25
The Moscow Siege
Terrorism also hit Europe in October, when Chechen rebels seized a Moscow theatre during the staging of a musical, taking hundreds of people captive. 18 of the attackers were women. They mined the theatre and threatened to blow it up unless Russian President Vladimir Putin withdrew troops from Chechnya. On the day the theatre was seized, some people managed to escape, as seen in dramatic footage filmed by Moscow's rescue services.
Three days later, in a pre-dawn raid, Russian special forces stormed the building, killing the 41 militants. At least 129 of the hostages also died, most of them felled by a narcotic gas used to knock out the rebels before the special forces stormed in. Russia held a national day of mourning for the victims amid rising criticism of the authorities over the number of hostages killed in the operation. Doctors treating the survivors complained their work had been hampered by not knowing exactly what gas had been used by the special forces. Many of the survivors were loaded unconscious onto buses outside the theatre after their rescue.
APTN
Moscow 23 and 24 October 2002
Various armoured personnel carriers encircling the theatre that was under siege
Mid shot elite Russian troops
Moscow Rescue Services
Moscow 23, October, 2002
(Night shots and mute)
Wide shot armed security officers in cover beside wall one officer takes aim with handgun
Three women run out of building, along wall and take cover with security officers
Three women running
APTN
Moscow 26, October, 2002 - Night shots
Various emergency vehicles, lights flashing, moving in to receive the wounded
Various troops milling around
Various wide of theatre with gunfire and explosions inside
Troops move into position inside building
Exterior shot of soldiers with arrested person
Russian Federal Security Bureau
Moscow 26, October, 2002 - Interior shots of theatre (mute)
Mid shot floor covered in shattered glass
Various dead female hostage takers slumped in theatre chairs
Various of dead man in civilian clothes lying on floor
Grenades, explosives and other military equipment
APTN
Moscow, 26, October, 2002
Close shot of notice saying the name of the play, Nord Ost, that was playing when the siege began
Various shots of man hugging crying woman outside hospital
Doctors in hospital attending to a former hostage
Various night shots of scene after special forces raided theatre
APTN
Moscow 28, October, 2002
Wide shot theatre, pan to flowers and tributes outside
Close up flowers and candles
SOUNDBITE (Russian) Nadeshda, Muscovite
"People need to know the whole truth - what kind of gas was used, what is the treatment against its side effects and what consequences it could bring. People have the right to know the truth."
10:06:58
Iraq
The United States mounted pressure on Iraq, saying the country was part of an axis of evil supporting and funding terrorism. The topic was an important part of discussions in Texas between US President George W Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who agreed the world would be better off without Saddam Hussein in power.
Then, the Washington Post newspaper reported it had uncovered a leaked White House plan to topple Saddam with US special forces troops and CIA agents. The plan won wide support from US political leaders. In September the British government consolidated its position of cooperation with the US when Blair released a dossier of evidence of the military capabilities of Saddam Hussein. The document claimed the Iraqi leader was trying to acquire nuclear weapons and had extended its range of ballistic missiles.
Iraq responded by taking international journalists to sites that the US believed were used to develop weapons of mass destruction, in a bid to discredit the claims.
Iraq maintained that one site, suspected by the US of being a factory for the production of chemical and biological agents, 100 kilometres west of Baghdad, was nothing more than a pesticide factory. And Iraq announced on September 16th that it would allow UN weapons inspectors back into the country.
Meanwhile, the US media war was also mounting. In Defence department briefings, journalists were shown video of Iraqi anti-aircraft missiles being fired at US and British warplanes patrolling over the no-fly zones. US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said it was proof Iraq regularly violated UN resolutions.
While the United States went on the diplomatic attack, Saddam Hussein tried to remain defiant. But he could not ignore a United Nations Security Council resolution calling for the disarmament of Iraq under the observation of United Nations weapons inspectors. The resolution, which was approved by every member of the council, said if Iraq did not disarm it would face 'serious consequences' that would almost certainly mean war. The leaders of the US and Britain hailed the resolution.
Iraqi TV
Baghdad - April 7, 2002
Mid shot Saddam Hussein during meeting with top military brass
POOL
Crawford, Texas - April 6, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Tony Blair, British Prime Minister
"Would the region, the world and not least the ordinary Iraqi people be better off without the regime of Saddam Hussein? The only answer that anyone can give to that question would be 'yes.'"
SOUNDBITE (English) George W Bush, United States President
"He's a man who obviously has something to hide. He told the world that he would show us he would not develop weapons of mass destruction and yet over the past decade he's refused to do so."
APTN
Washington DC - June 16, 2002
Various shots of Washington Post article covering the leaked White House plan
Iraqi TV
Baghdad - January 20, 2002
Close up Saddam Hussein
Pan to Iraqi officials
APTN
London - September 24, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Paul Beaver, Military Intelligence Expert (talking about British dossier of evidence against Iraq)
"There was no single killer fact in this document which I was looking for but what there is is a body of evidence that leads me to conclude that Saddam Hussein is a threat militarily."
APTN
Nassr/Taji Steel Fabrication and Military Production Facility, 25 kilometres north of Baghdad - 10 October, 2002
Exterior factory with military being escorted inside
Wide pan interior factory
Iraqi factory, 100 kilometres west of Baghdad - August 28, 2002
Various of reporters entering the site, suspected of being chemical and biological agents factory
Pan of barrels containing pesticides
SOUNDBITE (English) Husam Mohammed Ameen, Head of the Iraqi National Monitoring Commission
"The monitoring inspection teams visited this site tens of times, I can say more than 250 times visited this location and it has nothing to do with weapons of mass destruction."
APTN
Washington DC - Septmber 30, 2002
Predator video showing an Iraqi two-missile battery swivelling in a circle and then firing on a coalition plane in the southern no-fly zone (July 2001)
London - November 8, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Tony Blair, British Prime Minister
"Saddam must now make his choice and my message to him is this, disarm or face force, there must be no more games, no more deceit, no more prevarication, obstruction or defiance."
POOL
Washington DC - November 8, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) George W Bush, US President
"The resolution approved today presents the Iraqi regime with a test - a final test."
Cutaway
SOUNDBITE (English) George W Bush, US President
"The outcome of the current crisis is determined - the full disarmament of weapons of mass destruction by Iraq will occur."
10:10:05
Pakistan
In January 2002 Wall Street journalist Daniel Pearl, was kidnapped while trying to interview the leader of a radical Muslim faction with purported links to the al Qaida network. A month later the US State Department announced his death in captivity after Pakistani authorities received a video containing footage of Pearl in captivity and his death. In July, four men, including British-born militant Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, were convicted of the slaying.
Then, in June, an attacker crashed a bomb-laden vehicle into a guard post outside the US consulate in Karachi, killing himself and 11 other Pakistanis. A month later, Pakistani paramilitary commandos stormed residences in the city, arresting and charging three people with the bombing. Major General Salahuddin Satti, Director General of the Pakistan Rangers, said the trio were members of Islamic group Harkat-ul-Mujahedeen, also responsible for a suicide bombing at the city's Sheraton hotel in which 11 French engineers and three other people died.
In August there was yet another attack believed to be directed towards Western interests in Pakistan because of the government's involvement in the war against terror. Masked gunmen firing Kalashnikov rifles stormed the campus of a Christian school, killing six. Days later attackers hurled grenades at people leaving a church near a Christian hospital in Islamabad, killing three nurses. One of the attackers died in the assault.
APTN
New York - February 21, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Paul Steiger, Wall Street Journal Managing Editor
"We know believe that, based on reports from the US State Department and police officials in the Pakistani province of Sindh, that Danny Pearl was killed by his captors."
Karachi, Pakistan - February 21, 2002
Various of suspect Fahad Naseem taken from an armoured vehicle into the court, surrounded by heavy security
APTN
Karachi, Pakistan - June 14, 2002
Tilt down from US consulate with flag to car damaged after attack by suicide bomber
Low angle shot of road outside consulate showing bomb damage
Various of damaged car
Pan from debris in road to compound
APTN
Karachi, Pakistan - July 8, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Major General Salahuddin Satti, Director General of the Pakistan Rangers
"They wanted to damage the USA, its interests, and all the people, all the agencies which were supporting it or were friendly to it."
Various shots suspects Mohammad Hanif and Imran Rafiq at press conference
Various weapons found in raid on Karachi residences
APTN
Murree, Pakistan - August 5, 2002
Exterior of Murree Christian School, which was attacked by masked gunmen
Broken window
Bullet hole in window
Bloody sheet
Man adjusting sheets around a body
APTN
Islamabad, Pakistan - August 8, 2002
Various interiors of church showing debris and damage after attack, broken furniture, broken windows, glass on floor and benches
Shoes on ground
Dead body of attacker in mortuary
10:11:48
The Philippines
The United States sent troops to the Philippines for joint anti-terrorism exercises, designed to help the Philippines government fight its home-grown Islamic fundamentalist group, Abu Sayyaf. But there were violent clashes between police and protestors demonstrating against the US military presence. The exercises, on the southern Island of Mindanao, involved about 600 US troops. Abu Sayyaf separatists kidnapped and killed scores of Filipinos and many foreigners in the previous few years.
An American missionary couple, Gracia and Martin Burnham, was kidnapped on May 27 2001. In April 2002, the surrender of 18 Abu Sayyaf rebels raised hopes the Burnhams would be released unharmed. It followed another anti-terrorism success for the Philippines when an Indonesian man who allegedly planned a series of almost simultaneous bombings that killed 22 people in Manila in 2000 pleaded guilty to illegal possession of explosives. Fathur Al Ghozi is believed to be a key leader of the Jemaah Islamiyah, the Southeast Asian based group also believed to be behind the Bali nightclub bombings later in the year.
But, in June, more than a year after they had been kidnapped, Martin Burnham and a Filipino nurse also being held captive were killed in a shootout when US-trained commandos launched a rescue operation. Gracia was rescued. Four Abu Sayyaf members were killed and seven soldiers were wounded in the operation by Philippine commandos outfitted by the US with silencers, night vision equipment and high-tech headsets.
In August, Filipino troops raided a hideout of a kidnap gang on a US list of terrorists, rescuing two captives unharmed and killing one of the gang's leaders. President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo rushed to the scene of the raid in Magallanes town in the Cavite province, about 65 kilometers (40 miles) south of Manila, to show her commitment to her government's campaign against criminality and insurgency. Police identified the slain kidnapper as Faisal Marohombsar, a leader of the Pentagon gang, who escaped from the National Anti-Kidnapping Task Force's detention center in Manila last June 19. The gang's kidnap victims, four-year-old Patricia Chong and her nanny, managed to escape and were rescued unharmed.
APTN
Zamboanga File
Various of US soldiers arriving for joint anti-terrorism exercises with Philippine Army
Manila - January 23, 2002
Various of anti-US protest
Manila - January 31, 2002
Protestors clashing with riot police, hitting each other with sticks
Various of protestors shouting at riot police
Protestors charging police, protestors beaten back
APTN
Zamboanga, Philippines - April 17, 2002
Abu Sayyaf prisoners alighting from military truck
Wide shot group of Abu Sayyaf prisoners
Detainees walk past in a row
Abu Sayyaf prisoners getting onto truck
APTN
Manila - January 19, 2002
Fathur Rohman Al-Ghozi being escorted into news conference
Identity card
Close up Al Ghozi
APTN
Manila - December 30, 2000
Wide shot damaged light rail transit after explosion, with yellow "police line" barricade in foreground
Broken glass on the ground being cleared
APTN
Manila - June 7, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, Philippine President
"I am deeply saddened over the death of Ediborah Yap and Martin Burnham who were slain in an encounter with our troops and the Abu Sayyaf this afternoon after more than a year of captivity."
Philippines Government VNR
Philippines President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo standing in front of body of slain kidnapper Faisal Marohombsar
Various of dead man
Arroyo talking to government soldier wounded during the shootout
10:13:34
The Anthrax Scare
The anthrax scare in the United States was not over either. In May, the U-S Federal Reserve reported about 20 pieces of mail tested positive for traces of anthrax in an initial screening. The tainted mail was discovered as part of routine mail testing by the Federal Reserve in a mobile trailer stationed in a courtyard at the Federal Reserve's main buildings in downtown Washington. Fed spokesman David Skidmore said some of the mail was addressed to Chairman Alan Greenspan as well as other officials.
Five people died and 13 others were sickened in autumn 2001 when anthrax-laden letters were mailed to NBC news anchor Tom Brokaw, the New York Post and the Washington, D.C., offices of Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle and Senator Patrick Leahy. A year later, the FBI had yet to name a suspect.
APTN
Washington DC - May 7, 2002
Exterior view of Federal Reserve
APTN
File
Close up slide of anthrax bacteria
Close up film of antrax
Workers sorting mail
10:14:05
Various (Richard Reid/The Pipe-bomber/ Moussaoui /Lindh/Lockerbie)
In January, US authorities declared a further victory in the war against terrorism when shoebomber Richard Reid was indicted on eight charges. The British-born man was alleged to have tried to blow up an American Airlines flight using a bomb concealed in his shoes.
Authorities also caught up with Luke Helder, suspected of planting bombs in mailboxes across the United States. The FBI says Helder placed 18 bombs in mailboxes in five states along with anti-government messages. Six people were injured in the attacks. 21-year-old Helder had six bombs with him when he was arrested. Federal government officials described the crimes as 'acts of domestic terrorism.'
From the point of view of the US authorities, one of the greatest successes in the post-September 11 anti-terrorism drive was the arrest of Zacarias Moussaoui. Moussaoui was the first person to be charged as an accomplice in the September 11 attacks. He had taken flying lessons in the United States but his family protested his innocence.
The Bush administration also announced it would charge the American man who fought with the Taliban, John Walker Lindh, with conspiracy to kill US citizens in Afghanistan. Lindh told prosecutors that he joined a terrorist training camp in Afghanistan last May and spent seven months there. Osama bin Laden visited the camp several times and on one occasion allegedly met Lindh. Lindh was taken into custody in December 2001 by US forces after a prison uprising in a fortress in the northern Afghan city of Mazar-e-Sharif.
Meanwhile in a Scottish court in the Netherlands Libyan intelligence agent Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi failed in his appeal against his conviction for the Lockerbie bombing. All 259 people on board Pan Am flight 103, as well as 11 people on the ground, were killed when the jet blew up in the skies over the town of Lockerbie.
POOL
Washington DC - January 16, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) John Ashcroft, US Attorney General
"This morning a Federal Grand Jury in Massachusetts returned a nine count indictment against Richard Colvin Reid. Reid is charged as an Al Qaida trained terrorist who attempted to destroy American Airlines Flight 63 with explosive devices concealed in his shoes."
APTN
Boston, Massachusetts
Slow-motion close of shoebomber Richard Reid in custody
APTN
Boston, Massachusetts - January 28, 2002
Various court sketches of Richard Reid and judge in court
POOL
Reno - May, 10, 2002
Pipe-bomber suspect Luke John Helder walks out and gets into bomb
APTN
Washington DC - January 15, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) John Ashcroft, US Attorney General
"Today I'm announcing the filing of charges against John Walker Lindh, an American citizen, who was captured in Afghanistan, fighting for the Taliban."
File - Afghanistan - December 2001
John Walker Lindh sitting with other Taliban after his capture
10:15:13
Peru Bomb
A car bomb exploded outside the U.S. Embassy in the Peruvian capital Lima just days before US President George W Bush was due in the city for meetings with his Peruvian counterpart.
Nine people were killed in the bombing and tens injured. The blast occurred at about 10:45 p.m. (0345 GMT Thursday), in front of an upscale shopping centre, in an area with popular late-night restaurants and cinemas.
APTN
Lima March 21, 2002
Building damaged by car bomb which exploded outside the US embassy
Windscreen of car shattered by bomb, pan to body covered with plastic on the street
Crowd of people in front of bank building
Police walking in debris following the explosion
10:15:40
Spain Bombs
Basque separatist group ETA continued its campaign of terror in Spain. In June there were five explosions in two days, timed to coincide with the Seville EU summit. A British man was critically wounded and five others injured in one of the explosions, in Fuengirola, 150 kilometres (90 miles) southeast of Seville.
APTN
Fuengirola - June 22, 2002
Fire officer putting out fire after bomb
Smoke and burnt vehicles
Police gathered next to fire engine
Burnt out vehicle
10:16:11
Greece Bombs
In Greece, authorities said they were close to dismantling the November 17 terrorist group, which eluded Greek, American and British authorities since 1975, when it first emerged with the killing of the CIA station chief in Athens, Richard Welch. The anti-American group has used guns, bombs and anti-tank rockets to carry out 23 killings - including those of four US military officials, two Turkish diplomats and Greek businessmen and politicians. In July 2002 prosecutors in Athens charged two suspected November 17 terrorists over a series of robberies and killings, including those of American and British military officials. At the same time, an investigating magistrate arraigned the first three November 17 suspects arrested after a police sweep began three weeks ago. They were jailed pending trial, but no court date was set. Those in custody included an alleged leader of the extreme left-wing November 17 group, which carried out bombings, assassinations and robberies with impunity for 27 years.
APTN
Athens - July 21, 2002
November 17 (Greek terrorist group) suspect Christodoulos Xiros (large man in grey t-shirt) is walked into court
Xiros, followed by his brother Vassilis Xiros (long hair), and Dionissis Georgiadis (black t-shirt)
Police officer
Suspects Iraklis Kostaris (grey t-shirt) and Costas Karatsolis are lead into court
APTN
Athens - July 10, 2002
'November 17' flag
various guns and grenades found by police
10:17:02
Bin Laden Video and Fax
Over a year after the September 11 attacks, the man widely thought to be behind them continued to elude US authorities. In September Arab satellite channel Al Jazeera broadcast new footage of the alleged leader of Al Qaida, Osama bin Laden, saying the US should brace itself for further attacks. And in October a fax purportedly from bin Laden was shown on the channel. The writer praised the attack on a French oil tanker on October 6. APTN could not independently authenticate the signature on the fax, nor confirm that the sender was indeed the world's most wanted fugitive.
APTN
Date and location unknown
File of Osama Bin Laden warning US of further attacks (Arabic with English subtitles)
Bin Laden praising September 11 hijackers (audio overlaid with stills)
Al Qaida training camp in Afghanistan (English commentary)
Reconstruction of hijackers studying maps of September 11 targets (English commentary)
APTN
October 14, 2002
Wide shot showing all six pages of fax
Pan across text - highlighted in yellow - stating as follows: "We congratulate the Islamic community for the heroic operations which our holy warriors carried out in Yemen against the oil tanker and in Kuwait against the American forces. By blowing up this tanker in Yemen, they cut the pipeline that supplies oil to the crusaders of the West, in order to remind the enemy of the heavy price they will pay in blood if they continue their crusade against our community and steal our resources. The heroic operation in Kuwait also showed the danger that American forces will face wherever they are based in Islamic countries."
Signature (highlighted in yellow) at end of document, purporting to be that of Bin Laden
Pan from previously-published signature (in green) across to signature (yellow) in this document
Afghanistan
10:19:07
The Continuing Fight
At the beginning of the year, allied troops continued to rout out Al Qaida and Taliban fighters in Afghanistan.
In March, allied troops took the Shah-e-Kot valley, south of Gardez. After a withering aerial barrage, they prowled the rugged mountain area to hunt out any entrenched enemy troops.
In former Taliban strongholds, pro-Taliban fighters still resisted allied troops. In Kandahar in January four suspected former Taliban fighters were captured after an hour-long gun battle in the city centre. Later that month an eight-week stand-off in Kandahar Hospital ended when allied troops blasted their way into a hospital ward and killed six al Qaida fighters who had been holed up there, refusing to surrender.
In the Gardez region, in eastern Afghanistan, heavy fighting highlighted the fragility of Afghanistan's new-found peace. The battle pitted troops loyal to Bacha Khan - a warlord aligned to Afghanistan's interim administration and working with US special forces - against troops for the local government council. The fighting broke out after the locals opposed Khan's taking of the provincial governorship. The support for Al Qaida in the area posed a real problem for allied troops as it became clear locals here were still supporting enemy troops entrenched in the surrounding mountains. Local officials even took to handing out fake money to the citizens of Gardez as a representation of the reward they would receive if they handed over Al Qaida fighters.
In Kabul, the highest figures of authority were not immune to the continuing violence. In February the minister of civil aviation was attacked and killed at Kabul airport. At first it was thought those responsible were angry pilgrims, whose journey to Mecca had been delayed. But days later the interim president Hamid Karzai announced Abdul Rahman's death was linked to a blood feud dating back to the struggle against the Taliban. Five men were wanted in connection with the killing. Two were generals and others were members of the justice ministry and the intelligence service.
In July the new administration was targeted again, this time with the assassination of Vice President Abdul Qadir. The attack took place as Al Qadir was being driven through the capital. Two gunmen fired Kalashnikovs at the car, killing Qadir and his driver.
Then in September, in the bloodiest attack in the capital since the fall of the Taliban, a powerful car bomb rocked a busy market area near the Ministry of Information. At least 22 people were killed. On the same day, in Kandahar, there was a failed assassination attempt against President Karzai. His US bodyguards wrestled to the ground and shot dead the uniformed gunman.
APTN
Shah-e-Kot, South of Gardez - March 13, 2002
Northern Alliance soldiers flying over battle area
Commander looking through binoculars
Various fighters observing fighting area with AK-47 and rocket launchers
APTN
Kandahar January 3, 2002
Anti-Taliban soldier walking with gun
Anti-Taliban soldier pointing gun
Various pro-Taliban being led away
Man being lead away
APTN
Kandahar - January 8, 2002
Close up mortar aimed at window where other Al Qaida members are barricaded in hospital
APTN
Kandahar - January 28, 2002
Various of hospital AUDIO gunshots
Various of dead fighters inside the hospital
APTN
Gardez - January 31, 2002
Wide shot of smoke rising from mountains - AUDIO gunfire and explosions
Men on truck with gun secured to back
APTN
Gardez - February 8, 2002
Soldier speaking into radio
Long shot of soldier manning gun position
APTN
Gardez - March 3, 2002
US warplanes flying over Gardez
APTN
Gardez - March 6, 2002
Close up coalition Afghan fighter standing with weapon behind back
Men standing on building throwing paper money to the crowd
Various close ups of money
Soldier aiming mortar
Hillside cave being mortared
Tilt from gun to soldier
Soldier firing mortar
Troops on ground, pan to explosion on mountainside
APTN
Shah-e-Kot - March 14, 2002
Soldiers looking at B52 planes
Road between Gardez and Kabul - March 14, 2002
Wide shot tanks driving through mountains
POOL
Bagram - April 6, 2002
Captain Lou Bauer pointing to diagram of cave complex
APTN
Kabul - 15 February 2002
Various shots of pilgrims at Kabul airport
APTN
Kabul - January 2002
Afghan Aviation Minister Abdul Rahman congratulating the crew of the first commercial flight
APTN
Kabul - July 6, 2002
Soldier standing next to wrecked vehicle
Various of front of wrecked vehicle with bullet holes in the windscreen
Various interior of vehicle
Side of wrecked vehicle against wall
APTN
Jalalalabad - April 11, 2002
Haji Abdul Qadir, Afghan Vice President who was assassinated
APTN
Kabul - September 5, 2002
Overturned car amid wreckage following blast in market which killed at least 22
Men beside fire engine pouring water near burnt out yellow car
Injured in hospital room
Police and soldiers near overturned cars
10:22:16
Prisoners
Allied troops in Afghanistan faced the difficulty of looking after and punishing the enemy troops captured over the past year.
Detainees in Sheberghan prison, the largest Taliban detention facility in Afghanistan, endured a grim reality. The cells were damp, wet underfoot and freezing cold. The US army identified every prisoner using DNA and photographs. In March several hundred prisoners were freed after spending five months in Sheberghan The US said they were young men recruited by the Al Qaida network, but who had never actually taken part in fighting.
The worst offenders were sent to the US Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. The camp, which became known as 'Camp X-ray', was of growing concern to human rights groups. Inmates, dressed in bright orange jump suits and knitted caps, were kept in open cages and interrogated for long periods of time. They were not allowed access to their families or lawyers. But officials who visited the camp said they were in good health and able to talk freely and openly.
APTN
Sheberghan - January 19, 2002
Close up prisoners peering out of prison doors
Prisoners staring out from behind prison bars
Prisoners' footwear
Prisoners standing in pools of water in cells
APTN
Sheberghan - March 22, 2002
Prisoners looking through bars and barbed wire
APTN
Guantanamo, Cuba - January 16, 2002
Watch tower
US Defense Department
Guantanamo, Cuba - January 19, 2002
Various stills of Al Qaida prisoners at Camp X-ray
APTN
Guantanamo, Cuba - January 26, 2002
Wide of US soldiers in formation
APTN
Guantanamo, Cuba - February 10, 2002
Guard Tower
Prisoner being taken to interrogation room
10:23:12
War on Heroin Growers
The new Afghan administration was keen to prove to the world that it was taking action against the country's notorious heroin trade. Following the fall of the anti-drugs Taliban, tens of thousands of farmers rushed to start growing poppies again. Afghanistan regained its title as the world's biggest opium producer. When Karzai took office, he was quick to introduce a poppy ban, and moved to crack down on violators.
POOL
Kandahar - February 15, 2002
Various of Kandahar police standing with pile of confiscated drugs
Close up heroin
Police setting fire to the pile of drugs
APTN
Outside Jalalalabad, Nangrahar Province, Afghanistan - April 11, 2002
Various of crops being destroyed, including soldiers using rocket-propelled grenade to knock heads off poppies
10:23:39
Refugees and hunger
A combination of the years of Taliban control and a devastating drought left many people in remote areas on the brink of starvation. In the Hindu Kush area, thousands of people were found living on grassy roots and plants to survive. Abdul Ghias was one of those who had nothing with which to feed his family before aid arrived in the villages further down the mountain. He was able to fetch a sack of wheat for his family. But other more remote villages remained out of the reach of aid.
Those displaced by the years of war faced a long struggle to rebuild their lives. Despite the new administration and a fragile peace, for many life continued as before, inhabiting sprawling refugee camps, their homes destroyed.
APTN
Bonavash, Balkh Province - January 6, 2002
Man on donkey moving slowly along barren hillside
Cracked barren ground
Woman pours food into large bowl and stirs
Woman holding up the shirt of small child to show swollen stomach
APTN
Zari, Balkh Province - January 6, 2002
Abdul Ghias taking grassy clovers and eating them
Zari, Balkh Province - January 7, 2002
Abdul Ghias taking sack of food from free wheat distribution
APTN
Tasadi Refugee Camp - January 27, 2002
Various wide shots of the camp
Close up little girl
APTN
Siakhak village - January 19, 2002
Wide of aid truck passing through crowd
Villager carrying sack of wheat
Donkey with wheat on its back
Donkeys walking across snowy field
10:24:50
Disasters
Natural disaster also plagued Afghanistan, with its vulnerable geology.
In March, a massive earthquake hit the north of the country, and north-western Pakistan, killing hundreds of people and destroying homes. Road access was lost to the remote area, difficult to navigate in normal circumstances.
In February, an avalanche near the newly-reopened Salang tunnel connecting north and south Afghanistan killed five motorists. Rescuers managed to save hundreds of others trapped in the tunnel.
APTN
Nahrin - March 27, 2002
Mid shot aerial of damaged houses after earthquake
Various of land and trees moving during aftershock
People walking over destroyed buildings
Two men praying next to grave
APTN
Near Salang - February 7, 2002
Various of snow on mountain after avalanche in the region
Man walking up mountain taking water to his family
APTN
Near Salang - February
Various cars and trucks unable to get through the tunnel following the avalanche
Various of rescue vehicles
10:25:52
Return to democracy
In January, US President George W Bush received interim Afghan leader Hamid Karzai in the White House. Although Bush ruled out participating in a multinational peace-keeping force in Afghanistan, the two leaders did stress the partnership between the US and Afghanistan in fighting terrorism. It was a meeting which consolidated Afghanistan's progress to democracy. In February a ceremony was held to introduce the country's new national flag. The new red, green and black flag drew comparisons to that which was flown during the reign of exiled King Zaher Shah.
But, in many ways, the country has a long way to go before becoming a stable democracy. Economically, the fragility of the local currency was highlighted when rumours of dollarisation caused its value to drop 25 percent in a day. In September Karzai announced the introduction of new 500 and 1000 afghani (Afghan currency) banknotes in a bid to boost growth and make transactions easier. Before, even small purchases in Afghanistan required the buyer to carry large bundles of notes.
Meanwhile, Afghanistan's last monarch returned to the country. King Shah spent 29 years in exile. Many Afghans hoped his return would help bring peace and prosperity. One of the reasons for his return was to preside over the grand council of tribal leaders and other Afghan representatives, or loya jirga, which took place in June.
APTN
Washington DC - January 28, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Hamid Karzai, Interim leader of Afghanistan
"The war will go on against terrorism until we are sure that they are finished completely. Until we are sure that they are finished as an organisation, until we are sure they are finished as people hiding in caves and in the mountains, until we make sure the menace is gone."
POOL
Washington DC - January 28, 2002
Karzai listening to President George W Bush in the White House's Rose Garden
APTN
Kabul - February 5, 2002
Variuos of interim leader Hamid Karzai walking in procession ahead of ceremony to raise new Afghan flag at the presidential palace
Various of flag being raised
Long shot of new flag
APTN
Kabul - January 30, 2002
Money changing market packed with street traders
Bundles of afghanis - national currency
APTN
Kabul - September 4, 2002
Close up specimen of new 500 afghani banknote, then 1000 afghani note
APTN
Kabul - April 18, 2002
Banner of the king to welcome King Shah back to Afghanistan
Various King Zaher Shah and Hamid Karzai walking past the camera
Zaher Shah praying at tomb
APTN
Kabul - August 4, 2002
Karzai walking through the palace gardens with King Shah
10:27:26
Return to civilization
The new Afghan authorities, to a greater extent in the capital Kabul, gradually reversed social changes that had been imposed by the Taliban. Schools that had been closed reopened. Girls, who had been banned from study beyond the age of eight, returned to the classrooms. The United Nations helped launch special catch-up classes for girls who had missed education under the Taliban.
And the Kabul Weekly, post-Taliban Afghanistan's first independent newspaper, was launched. The editor said the newspaper would test the government's commitment to media freedom and help lead the country towards democracy.
Women were also able to enjoy simple freedoms that had been banned under the Taliban; going to a beauty salon, buying pictures of their favourite film stars, and not wearing a burqa. Confirming this new-found freedom was the release this year of 'Roz', a new women's magazine, funded by the French magazine, Elle.
Kabul's National Theatre also reopened for entertainment after being closed for six years under the Taliban. Damage that the building sustained during heavy fighting in 1992 was still visible but it didn't stop the audience enjoying the performance.
Music too, was heard again in Kabuls streets. At the Pamir Hotel in the heart of Kandahar, a former Taliban stronghold, dozens of men quickly took up the custom of going every night to share their appreciation of music.
And more modern forms of entertainment also quickly found their way into post-Taliban society. Video arcades for games junkies and film hire outlets also sprung up across the country.
APTN
Herat - January 10, 2002
Close up entrance to girl's school gates
Various young women with faces revealed talking to each other outside school
SOUNDBITE (Dari) Zahra, School Student
"From today we can go to school again. Once again we are free to further our knowledge and education and we are very happy about this."
APTN
Kabul March 23, 2002
SOUNDBITE (Dari) Hamid Karzai, Afghan leader
(breaking into tears) "The children at this school are the future of Afghanistan."
APTN
Kabul - January 27, 2002
Various close ups of the Kabul Weekly
Sign outside the offices of Kabul Weekly
Journalist reading the Kabul Weekly
Close up Kabul Weekly
APTN
Various shots of first edition of women's magazine 'Roz' coming off printing press
Various close-ups of magazine's front page
Various pages of the magazine
APTN
Kabul January 8, 2002
Exterior National Theatre building showing damage suffered during fighting in 1992
Destroyed roof
Audience sitting in open-air theatre
Performance on stage
APTN
Kandahar - January 21, 2002
Musicians playing together in the Pamir Hotel
Various of musicians
APTN
Kandahar - January 22, 2002
Entrance to video arcade
Video store
Man looking at DVDs
Close up DVDs
Video stall
The Middle East
10:29:43
Suicide bombs
In 2002, there was no let up in the deadly suicide attacks against Israelis, despite the Israeli offensive against the Palestinians greatly restricting their movement and increasing security around Palestinian-controlled areas.
On January 27, for the first time, a female suicide bomber struck. 28 year old Wafa Idris killed herself and an 81 year old Israeli man when she detonated the explosives she was carrying in a busy shopping street in Jerusalem. Her mother said Wafa had been shot three times by rubber bullets while working as a paramedic for the Red Crescent in Ramallah.
On June 18 there were devastating scenes when a suicide bomber killed himself and 19 civilians in a bomb attack on a bus in southern Jerusalem.
On March 27, in the Israeli resort of Netanya, a bomber blew himself up at a hotel, killing 28 Israelis celebrating Passover. The attack claimed by militant group Hamas, was the deadliest since the beginning of the uprising.
On March 9 at least 11 people were killed and 50 injured in a suicide bomb attack on a crowded cafe in west Jerusalem, near the official residence of then Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
And on May 7 a suicide bomber attacked a social club in the Israeli town of Rishon Letzion, killing 16 people and injuring more than 50.
APTN
Jerusalem - January 27, 2002
Scene of attack after first female suicide bomber hit
Debris from blast
Woman holding injured woman
Police at scene
APTN
Ramallah - January 30, 2002
SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Safia Idris, Mother of female suicide bomber Wafa Idris
"She left on Sunday. I had no idea of what she was doing or where she was going, she didn't tell me anything."
APTN
Jerusalem - June 18, 2002
Zoom into damaged bus and soldiers after suicide bomb which killed 19 people
Bodies on ground covered with black plastic, pan to bus
Wide of damaged bus
Body bags beside road, pan to bus
Israeli Arab girl injured in blast
Various shots of fax in Arabic from militant group Hamas claiming responsibility for suicide bombing
APTN
Al-Faraa Refugee Camp, near Nablus, West Bank - June 18, 2002
Naima Al-Ghoul, mother of bomber Mohammed Al-Ghoul, seated with women mourners
Close up photograph of attacker, tilt up to Naima weeping
APTN
Netanya - March 27, 2002
Exterior damaged hotel after suicide bomber blew himself up in the dining room killing 19
Various destruction inside hotel
Various pans of scene outside hotel with police and bodies on ground
APTN
Jerusalem - March 9, 2002
Body bags in street outside café where suicide bomber blew himself up (opposite prime minister's residence), killing 11
Investigators at entrance to café
Various exteriors of café
Various of café interiors seen through broken windows
APTN
Rishon Letzion - May 8, 2002
Wide of scene of bomb attack outside social club where 16 people were killed
Various bombed building and investigators sifting through debris
10:31:53
Israeli attacks on Palestinian headquarters
With no end in sight to the cycle of violence in the Middle East, the Israelis sought to consolidate their position and force the Palestinian administration to prevent more suicide attacks. On January 18, the Israelis sent more than 20 tanks to surround Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's headquarters in Ramallah. Overnight the pressure was turned up, when Israeli tanks and armoured personnel carriers sealed off Arafat's Ramallah headquarters and destroyed a Palestinian Broadcasting Corporation building. The siege came after Arafat had already been confined to Ramallah for several weeks by the Israeli authorities. Now he was confined to his office. On the 20th of February Israeli helicopters fired on Arafat's office for the first time, causing massive destruction.
Arafat was not released from his confinement until May. The Israeli Defence Force had destroyed all of Ramallah's infrastructure - and its bureacracy, schools and security services. The Israelis would return to put Arafat under siege several times later in the year, although never for such an extended period.
APTN
Ramallah, West Bank - January 18, 2002
Tank blocking road near Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's headquarters
Tanks parked
APTN
Ramallah - January 19, 2002
APC drives into carpark in front of the Palestinian Broadcasting Centre
Explosion, lights go out
Wide of PBC building in flames
Wide PBC building entrance
Various interiors of damage
Various of tanks surrounding Arafat's office
APTN
Ramallah - February 20, 2002
Missiles hitting Arafat's office
Various interior shots (with blood on the ground) inside Arafat's residence
Various firefighters dousing flames outside Arafat's residence
APTN
Ramallah - February 21, 2002
SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Yasser Arafat, Palestinian leader
"This is an attempt to nail down the Palestinian people and its leadership. They don't know that we as a people are undefeated and this leadership is part of the undefeated people."
10:33:24
Operation Defensive Shield
Israeli forces also attacked Palestinian areas they said were breeding ground for suicide attackers. Operation Defensive Shield was the largest military operation in the West Bank since 1967, launched in response to the Passover suicide attack in Netanya, when 28 people were killed. Nablus and Jenin were the two places highest on the Israeli blacklist. In Nablus, the West Bank's largest city, Israeli forces battled with Palestinian gunmen. The fighting meant many of the injured, and those killed, could not be evacuated and human rights organisations complained of lack of access to parts of the city. Jenin camp too was out of bounds to human rights organisations while Israeli tanks moved in, destroyed homes and launched fierce fighting to rout out terrorists. Journalists were only able to enter the camp six weeks after the Israelis attacked. They found the once lively streets were silent and that many of the camp's people had fled during the fighting. Israel estimated 100 Palestinians were killed in the camp during eight days of the deadliest fighting. Palestinians said the toll was far higher and that many people were also starved, or cut off from their water supplies. Israel lost 23 soldiers in the Jenin operation. After the Israelis left, the Palestinians struggled to come to terms with the extent of the devastation. Hardly a building remained untouched and the streets were piled high with rubble.
APTN
Nablus - April 7, 2002
Wide shot of Nablus, with AUDIO gunfire
Various of gunmen firing on Israeli position from behind the wall
Body of gunman
Gunmen firing
Injured man being dragged to safety
Injured man being carried on stretcher
APTN
Jenin - March 1, 2002
Wide of Jenin refugee camp with minaret and AUDIO call to prayer and explosions from the battle
APTN
Jenin - April 13, 2002
Destroyed street in Jenin
Woman carrying bottle
Women entering home which has been half destroyed
Street littered with debris from buildings
Old man looking through window
Buildings with bullet and shell holes, destroyed homes
Charred body
Women salvaging possessions
APTN
Jenin - April 16, 2002
Woman drinking from tap in the rubble
Sewage water in rubble, pan to women sitting and talking in demolished house
Old woman sitting on doorstep of destroyed house
Various of people searching through rubble
Woman standing on first floor of destroyed house with her children
Pan of destroyed houses
10:35:27
The Battle of Manger Square
After running battles with Israeli troops, about 200 Palestinian gunmen forced their way into the Church of the Nativity - believed to be the birthplace of Jesus Christ - in Bethlehem's Manger Square. Israeli tanks positioned themselves on the square and soldiers occupied buildings overlooking the church. Thus began the siege of Bethlehem that lasted five weeks. Those inside the church with the gunmen included human rights activists, journalists and members of the church's clergy.
During the siege, while intense negotiations took place, some of those holed up inside, and the bodies of those killed in gunbattles with the Israelis, were able to leave. Israeli soldiers threw smoke bombs between those leaving and journalists, blocking the view.
A European-brokered deal ended the siege. As part of the deal, 13 of the group- those highest on Israel's wanted list- were deported, first to Cyprus and then to other European countries. Another 26 militiamen were transported to the Gaza Strip, where they were to remain, exiled from the West Bank.
APTN
Bethlehem - April 2, 2002
Various of Bethlehem, AUDIO gunfire
APTN
Bethlehem - April 3, 2002
(telephone interview over still of Church of the Nativity)
SOUNDBITE (English) Marc Innaro, Correspondent of Radiotelevisione Italia (RAI)
"The situation in and around the Nativity Church in the heart of Bethlehem is still unchanged. There are inside more or less 200 Palestinian gunmen from all the Palestinian factions, Hamas, Jihad, the Al Aqsa Brigade and so on."
APTN
Bethlehem - April 2, 2002
Tank driving towards camera, drives over car in street
APTN
Bethlehem - April 8, 2002
Various early morning shots of Manger Square, smoke rising with AUDIO heavy gunfire
Israeli soldiers searching firefighters (before allowing them to attend to fire)
Various water hosing down fire, AUDIO gunfire
Various shots scene with smoke
APTN
Bethlehem - April 25, 2002
Wide shot Manger Square with tank in front
Blindfolded prisoners leaving church
Israeli soldiers checking coffins
APTN
Bethlehem May 4, 2002
Israeli soldier standing guard
Church bells ringing, zoom out to church
Pakistan/India/Kashmir
10:37:19
Build up of troops
There was no let up in the tensions between Pakistan and India over Kashmir. Pakistan denied Indian allegations that it supported anti-India militant groups operating in Kashmir and India.
The two countries came close to their third war in January after an attack the previous month on the Indian parliament. Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf launched a crackdown on militants, closing the border between Pakistan and Kashmir.
Both countries amassed troops along the Kashmiri line of control. In May again, intense international diplomatic efforts were needed to avert a war. India stepped up pressure on Pakistan following a raid on an Indian army camp. India fired its guns across the border, triggering an exchange of fire.
A security summit in Almaty, Kazakhstan was the setting for more diplomatic efforts to get the two leaders off a war footing. While their troops fired at each other in Kashmir, Musharraf and Indian Prime Minister Bihari Vajpayee, sat at the same table, exchanged angry statements blaming each other.
The Almaty meeting came just a week after Pakistan launched missile tests in an undisclosed location. The missile was a locally-made medium range surface-to-surface ballistic missile called the Ghauri, capable of carrying both a conventional and nuclear warhead. The tests further angered India.
APTN
Jammu, (near border with India) - January 13, 2002
Indian soldiers passing sign saying 'Kashmir, paradise on earth'
APTN
Wagah, Pakistan - December 31, 2002
Pakistani border guard performing ceremony to close border with people watching in the background
Pakistani and Indian guards performing ceremony
Indian (on left of picture) and Pakistani flags lowered
APTN
Almaty, Kazakhstan - June 3, 2002
Indian Prime Minister Bihari Vajpayee at street naming ceremony
Vajpayee and Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev at ceremony
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf walking off plane
APTN
Athmkam, on Pakistani side of Line of Control - May 27, 2002
Wide of Pakistani commander giving briefing
Briefing board
APTN
Athmkam, on Pakistani side of Line of Control - January 2, 2002
Pakistani soldiers overlooking river valley marking line of control
Gun pointing out of bunker
Soldier in bunker
APTN
Samba sector, Jammu-Kashmir - January 2, 2002
Indian soldiers camouflaging mortar position
APTN
Ranbir Singh Pura Sector, on Indian side of Line of Control - January 8, 2002
Indian soldiers standing inside bunker
Close up Indian soldier's face
APTN
Near Nursarhy village, on Pakistani side of Line of Control - January 16, 2002
Various Pakistani troops on patrol near Line of Control
Various Pakistani troops on guard with machine guns looking into Indian village of Tethwal, across the Line of Control
Pakistani Army Video
Undisclosed location, Pakistan - May 25, 2002
Test missile blasts off
10:39:08
Kashmir
Violence was ever present on the streets of Kashmir as separatists fought their own war against the Indian authorities. Civilians were often caught in the crossfire. A crackdown on the separatists by the unpopular Indian authorities often only served to increase tensions with the majority Muslim population.
Supporters of separatist leader Yasin Malik resisted his arrest in Srinagar, the Kashmiri capital, by Indian police. Scuffles ensued between the stone-throwing supporters and police wielding tear gas. Malik's arrest came a day after police caught a woman carrying 100 thousand US dollars in cash allegedly intended for him. After his arrest, Malik was hospitalised to undergo treatment for a heart ailment. More protests were sparked when activists from the Hindu nationalist group Shiv Sena allegedly barged into the hospital.
In May, three masked men shot dead separatist leader Abdul Ghani Lone as he sat on a platform at a memorial rally in Srinagar. Lone was one of the leaders of the All Party Huriyat Conference, a legal group which advocated Kashmir's separation from India. He was considered a moderate and as such had been threatened by both Hindu nationalists and Islamic militants.
Violence surged ahead of elections in the troubled province. Independence groups called for a boycott of the vote, which they said would be rigged in favour of the state's pro-India ruling party.
Indian Law Minister Mushtaq Ahmad Lone was killed in September by suspected Islamic rebels.
As the elections approached the violence increased. At the end of September suspected Islamic militants blew up a vehicle carrying election candidate Khaleda Mushtaq, killing her father, two supporters and one police escort. More than 120 political activists and candidates were killed in two months leading up to the elections.
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - March 25, 2002
Policeman tells separatist leader (leader of group Jammu-Kashmir Liberation Front, JKLF) Yasin Malik he is being arrested at briefing given by Malik
Scuffles between police and Malik's supporters
Malik being led out of building, surrounded by supporters shouting 'We want freedom'
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - March 26, 2002
Yasin Malik's supporters chanting slogans, burning tyres
Protestors pelting stones at security, tear gas shells explode amongst them on the street
Security forces running towards protestors
Protestors pelting stones
Policeman throwing stone back at protestors
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - May 9, 2002
JKLF leader Javed Mir and other protestors chanting slogans in support of Yasin Malik (after hospital invasion)
Demonstration being stopped by security forces
Police firing tear gas shells
Protestors pelting policemen with stones
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - May 21, 2002
Wide shot bodies of separatist Kashmiri leader Abdul Ghani Lone and his bodyguard
Various mourning relatives
Close up body
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - 1996 FILE
Various file of separatist Kashmiri leader Abdul Ghani Lone
APTN
Sogam, Kashmir - September 12, 2002
Body of Mushtaq Ahmad Lone
Wide of body
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - September 28, 2002
Close up injured candidate Khaleda Mushtaq
APTN
Pahloo Pulgam, outside of Srinaga - September 28, 2002
Close up damaged car
Photograph of injured candidate Mushtaq
APTN
Jammu - September 24, 2002
Security outside polling station for Kashmir elections
Voters marked with indelible ink
Man casts vote
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - September 20, 2002
Protestors shouting 'Pakistan' at march against state legislative elections in Kashmir
Tracking shot security force members running through street, firing tear gas at fleeing protestors
Various security force members firing tear gas at protestors
APTN
Kupwara District - March 17, 2002
Wide shot dead suspected Islamic militants, surrounded by Indian security forces who killed 10 of them
Arms and ammunition recovered from militants on display
10:41:22
Ayodhya
The Indian town of Ayodhya, in the state of Uttar Pradesh, became the focus of tensions between Hindu nationalists and Muslims. The Hindus remained intent on building a temple in the town, near the site of a 16th century mosque destroyed by rioters in 1992. Thousands of Hindus visited the city as the campaign mounted. They rejected court orders saying they were not to build the temple, saying they would go ahead anyway. In the communal strife that followed, hundreds were killed.
APTN
Ayodhya, India - February 25, 2002
City of Ayodhya
APTN
Delhi, India - February 26, 2002
Replica of Ayodhya temple intended to be built
APTN
Ayodhya, India - February 26, 2002
Women offering flower to sacred Saryu river during morning prayer
Hindu pilgrims praying at river
APTN
Ayodhya, India - March 15, 2002
Hindu procession with World Hindu Council leader Ramchandra Das Paramhans
Das with consecrated pillar the Hindus want to use in the temple
APTN
Ayodhya, India - February 17, 2002
Close up flower garland
Wide of prayer meeting near temple pillars
Hindu priest making offering
APTN
Ayodhya, India - March 1, 2002
Various of Ayodhya train station as Hindus leave because of violence in town
Hindu pilgrims waiting for train, chanting 'We will be back on March 15 to build the temple'
10:42:19
Gujarat riots and religious killing
Religious tensions also ran high in the state of Gujarat where religious rioting claimed thousands of lives, most of them Muslim. The riots were sparked when a Muslim mob burned a train carrying Hindu nationalists. Then, Hindus went on a killing rampage, burning down Muslim homes and businesses. The police and army were accused of standing by, watching Muslims, including women and children, be burnt alive. The city of Ahmadabad saw some of the worst violence.
APTN
Gujarat State - March 2, 2002
Armed police telling people in Hindi area to get inside or they will be shot
Crowd running (crowd had been watching people trying to salvage their possessions from burning buildings)
Policemen with stick chasing two men
APTN
Ahmadabad, Gujarat - April 26, 2002
Policeman shouting for tear gas to be fired
Policemen firing gas shells
Flaming torch thrown at building by rioter
Building on fire
Police squad firing tear gas
APTN
Kalupur, South of Ahmadabad, Gujarat - April 29, 2002
Flames rising from burning building, petrol bombs hurled through air
Police firing
Burning building
APTN
Ahmadabad, Gujarat - April 30, 2002
Various shots police leading away arrested men, said to have been part of a group which attacked a house with homemade firebombs
APTN
Ahmadabad, Gujarat - March 2, 2002
Young Muslim girl being treated for burns
Girl covered in bandages
APTN
Ahmadabad, Gujarat - March 1, 2002
Various crowd looking at smouldering human remains
Close up name badge lying on ground
Various of Gurbarg residential society - burnt cars and bicycles lying around
Various large fire-damaged building
Dead body covered with cloak lies in road
Burnt shops
Remains of burnt cars and bicycles
APTN
Ahmadabad, Gujarat - March 23, 2002
Various riot damage
Various police standing behind grill
Other Asian News
10:44:20
East Timor
The world's newest country, East Timor, continued on the path of democracy.
In January East Timor launched a truth and reconciliation commission to heal deep rifts in society and promote national unity. The commission focused on atrocities committed between 1974, when Portuguese colonial rule collapsed and 1999, when Indonesia finally pulled out following a UN-sponsored plebiscite. Interim foreign minister and nobel peace prize winner Jose Ramos Horta opened the commission.
Meanwhile in the Indonesian capital, Jakarta, seven senior officials were charged with genocide committed in East Timor in 1999, before, during, and after the referendum. The atmosphere surrounding the 2002 presidential vote could not have been more different to that of the referendum. The two rival candidates hugged. The result was a foregone conclusion. The only rival to independence hero Xanana Gusmao was Xavier do Amaral, who said he only joined the race to educate the East Timorese in the meaning of democracy.
On May 19, East Timor officially became a nation, when Xanana Gusmao was inaugurated as president and the United Nations handed over power to the fledgling government.
APTN
Dili, East Timor - January 21, 2002
Audience at truth and reconciliation commission hearing
SOUNDBITE (English) Jose Ramos Horta, East Timorese Interim Foreign Minister
"Our past, present and future can never be separated. We are committed to reconciliation."
APTN
Jakarta, Indonesia - February 21, 2002
Exterior Jakarta human rights court
Sidabalok, the court's secretary, receiving documents
Close up documents, tilt up to Sidabalok
APTN
Dili, East Timor - April 14, 2002
Presidential candidates Xanana Gusmao and rival Xavier do Amaral hug outside polling station
Cutaway polling station sign
Gusmao and do Amaral come out together to vote
SOUNDBITE (English) Bishop Carlos Belo, East Timor Bishop and Nobel Peace Laureate
"It's an historical moment. The people of East Timor are voting for the first time for their president."
APTN
Taci Tolo, East Timor
Parliamentary speaker Francisco Guterres puts sash around Gusmao's soldiers and his inauguration as president
SOUNDBITE (English) Kofi Annan, UN Secretary General
"I have the honour to transfer executive authority from the United Nations Transitional Administration to the institutions of the Democratic Republic of East Timor."
10:46:03
Indonesia
Religious strife between Christians and Muslims continued in Ambon and the surrounding Maluku islands. Up to 9,000 people were killed and tens of thousands were forced to flee their homes in two years of fighting in the archipelago, known as the Spice Islands during Dutch colonial rule. A fragile peace deal between the two communities was frequently undermined by violence. At the beginning of April a deadly blast killed four people. Later in the month 12 were killed in a Christian village by a raid of suspected paramilitary Muslims.
In Jakarta, the country's best-known Islamic militant went on trial. Jafar Umar Thalib, leader of militant group Laskar Jihad, was accused of inciting violence against Christians in the Maluku province. In his first court appearance, Thalib's supporters rallied for his cause. But when his trial began in October, in the wake of the Bali bombing, his extremist group had apparently disbanded.
APTN
Ambon, Indonesia - April 3, 2002
Various people in street after bomb blast shouting, 'Fire, fire'
People throwing rocks at government building
People shouting at army
Various of burning governor's office building
Police shooting in the air to disperse crowd
APTN
Ambon, Indonesia - April 28, 2002
Pan from house to people fleeing
Church on fire
Wounded person being carried away by people
APTN
Jakarta, Indonesia - August 15, 2002
Jafar Umar Thalib walking into court and sitting, supporters chanting 'Allah u Akhbar' (God is great)
10:47:06
Cambodia Statuettes
In Cambodia, a stash of ancient Buddha statues was uncovered by chance after centuries buried in the ground. There were 31 statues in all - 27 of them said to be made of gold. They were found during construction work in the grounds of Po Pich temple in Komphong Thom province, 130 kilometres north of Phnom Penh. Workers digging out foundations for a new temple discovered a jar and found the statues inside. Some are only as big as a man's thumb. Hundreds of pilgrims and tourists flocked to see them.
APTN
Kompong Thom - August 2002
Wide shot monks in grounds of temple
Grounds of temple, showing excavation area
Close up statues
Pilgrims looking at statues
Statues
10:47:29
Myanmar Suu Kyi released
Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi was freed from house arrest in May after 19 months. She immediately pledged to do all she could to bring back democracy to military-ruled Myanmar. Suu Kyi arrived at the ramshackle building housing her National League for Democracy party to a tumultuous welcome by thousands of cheering supporters, only a few hours after the junta announced her release.
APTN
Rangoon, Myanmar - May 6, 2002
Various Burmese Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi walking through street swamped by crowd
Suu Kyi on stage being cheered by crowd
SOUNDBITE (English) Burmese Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi
"The party was founded in order to bring democracy to Burma, so that is our task, that is what we have to do. And I, as general secretary of the party, must do everything I can to make sure that democracy comes to Burma quickly and comes in the right way."
10:48:00
Pakistan Rape
There was international outcry when news emerged about the gang-rape of a woman in rural Pakistan. A tribal council apparently ordered the rape as punishment against the woman's family. The four rapists went on trial in the remote Pakistani village where the rape happened. Ten other men also went on trial in the same court for allegedly ordering the rape. Eight of the 14 were acquitted; the other six were sentenced to death.
APTN
Dera Ghazi Khan, Pakistan - July 26, 2002
Exterior court - men accused of gang-raping woman after tribal council ordered it to punish her family
Pan of accused
APTN
Dera Ghazi Khan, Pakistan - August 3, 2002
Close up rape victim Mukhtaran Mai, pull out to victim standing with defence team and family
Close up victim's face
Accused in chains
APTN
Meerwala, Punjab Province, Pakistan - July 6, 2002
Rape victim Mukhtaran Mai and her brother Shakoor Mai
SOUNDBITE (Urdu) Mukhtaran Mai, Rape Victim
"I was dragged by the people, I begged them not to do this, I begged them to stop, but they would not. My uncle and my father tried to stop them but they did not stop."
Father crying
10:48:51
Pakistan Referendum
Pakistan's president Pervez Musharraf won a controversial referendum to endorse his rule for a further five years, ending a three-year military dictatorship. He won the referendum by 98 percent, although it was marred by accusations of widespread manipulation.
APTN
Rawalpindi, Pakistan - April 30, 2002
Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf voting
Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf at polling station
APTN
Islamabad, Pakistan - April 30, 2002
Men emptying ballot box
APTN
Islamabad - May 1, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Imran Khan, Former Prime Ministerial Candidate
"The reason my party supported him was that we feel he should now clean up Pakistani politics - our judicial system and our election commission."
10:49:17
Russia Clashes
Clashes broke out in Moscow between police and leftist radicals calling for a revolution. Police responded with clubs and batons when the protestors tried to force their way through police cordons.
APTN
Moscow - September 15, 2002
Ultra-leftist youth chanting slogans at protest calling for revolution
Line of riot police
Protestors pushing past police cordon
Police fighting with protestors
SOUNDBITE (Russian) Leader of demonstrators
"If the proletariat seize power, we will be in a better position to deal with the bourgeoisie and restore order. Thanks comrades, long live the revolution."
10:49:44
Koreas
South and North Korea embarked on cabinet level talks to revive a reconciliation process that thrived after a historic summit in 2000, but stalled amid US-North Korean tension. A 29-member North Korean delegation flew into Seoul aboard a Soviet-built plane for the three-day talks. The talks focused on previous agreements reached since relations thawed between the two Koreas. Among those was the demining programme in the demilitarised zone (DMZ) which divides the two countries. Demining the area will clear the way for rail and road links across the two sides.
POOL
Seoul, South Korea - August 12, 2002
Head of North Korea delegation, Kim Ryong Song, shaking hands with South Korean counterpart, Jeong Se-hyun, at high-level talks aimed at reviving reconciliation process
APTN
Paju, Near demilitazised zone between the two Koreas - September 19, 2002
Wide shot South Korean soldiers opening wire door at border line in southern part of DMZ
Land mine breaker inside DMZ
Border line where Gyeongui railway was disconnected
Close up road sign directing Seoul and Pyongyang
APTN
Pyongyang, North Korea - September 23, 2002
Various central Pyongyang with pictures of North Korean leader Kim II Sung pictures
Various of statue of Kim II Sung in square named after him
Disasters
10:50:31
Volcanoes
The Congolese town of Goma was all but swallowed up when the nearby volcano of Nyiragongo sent down three major flows of lava. Between 50 and 100 people died in the initial lava flows, and another 60 died when a petrol station exploded. An estimated 300 thousand people fled east following the eruption, taking refuge in already overflowing refugee camps in neighbouring Rwanda.
When the Kilauea volcano erupted in Hawaii, thousands of tourists flocked to see the nightly light show as the lava flowed into the sea. Officials warned the lava was giving off noxious gas but there were no reported injuries. Kilauea is the world's most active volcano.
Europe's most active volcano, Mount Etna, erupted in October. The violent and devastating flank eruption took place after only a few hours of seismic activity. The airport was closed as ash poured into the nearby town of Catania. People living in the town were given gas masks while those from hamlets further up the mountain were evacuated to tents in the valley.
Amateur Video
Goma, Congo - January 18, 2002
People carrying belongings evacuating town
Goma, Congo - January 20, 2002
Night shot of lava flowing in to Lake Kivu, hissing and steaming
Goma, Congo - January 18, 2002
Man pulling aside piece of burning lava with a stick
APTN
Hawaii - September 13, 2002
Two shots of lava flowing into ocean at night
APTN
Sicily, Italy - October 31, 2002
Various night shots of Mount Etna spewing lava (south side)
Santa Venerina, north side of Mount Etna - October 31, 2002
Tented city where local resident displaced from hamlets further up mountain are staying
Sicily, Italy - October 30, 2002
Smoke rising in the distance
Rock in foreground, lava slowly moving in background
Various burning lava
10:51:35
Earthquake
In April a strong earthquake hit Georgia, killing three people in the capital Tbilisi when a building collapsed. Residents poured into the streets and slept in their cars rather than risk returning to their homes.
A 6.0 magnitude quake struck north-west Iran in June, killing at least 500 people. Survivors who had lost their homes stayed in tents. According to the International Red Cross, almost a hundred villages were destroyed.
Italy was in mourning after an earthquake hit the small town of San Giuliano di Puglia, causing its school to collapse. 26 children and three adults were killed. Angry questions were raised about the enforcement of laws governing building safety in the region.
APTN
Tbilisi, Georgia - April 26, 2002
Day shot of crushed car with rubble all around it
Night shot of body being carried onto stretcher from rubble
APTN
Tabalkash village, Northern Iran - June 24, 2002
Two shots of damage caused by earthquake
Various of tents where earthquake survivors were living and people in camp
APTN
San Giuliano di Puglia, Italy - November 1, 2002
Shot from top of hill above town immediately after quake struck
Close up body covered in green blanket being carried out by firemen and paramedics
Pan from pile of rubble to crying couple walking
Various of collapsed houses
Rescuers as they bring up a survivor
Rescue workers lifting small child's desk
10:52:36
Forest fires
Forest and peat-bog fires raged in woodlands across Russia in August. The worst of the fires burnt in the area east of Moscow, causing a thick smog to drench the capital.
APTN
Shature, Near Moscow - August 2, 2002
Close up fire on forest floor, tilts up to trees and smoke
Various man in military uniform spraying ground with hose
Wide pan of firemen wetting smouldering ground
APTN
Moscow - September 4, 2002
Moscow river in smog with silhouettes of buildings
APTN
Moscow - August 15, 2002
Church domes in smoke
10:53:04
Crashes
In September, 23 people were killed when a bus in Guatemala plunged down a steep ravine and into a river below. Witnesses told police that the driver of the bus lost control after speeding to beat another bus to the next stop.
Earlier that month in Bolivia dozens of people were killed when a bus crashed off Bolivia's infamous 'road of death' near the capital La Paz.
There were echoes of September 11 when in April in Milan a small plane with only the pilot on board crashed into a downtown Milan office skyscraper. Four people were killed and 60 injured. The impact destroyed two floors of the Pirelli building, once the headquarters of Italy's tyre manufacturer.
In the Ukraine in July, tragedy hit the Western city of Lviv, when a fighter jet crashed into the crowd at an airshow killing 83 people and injuring 116. The Su-27 warplane clipped the ground while performing aerobatic moves and sheared through a crowd of hundreds before exploding in a ball of fire. Officials announced two days of national mourning.
The small duchy of Luxembourg suffered its worst air disaster when a twin-engine plane coming from Berlin crashed in dense fog close to Luxembourg airport. 20 people were killed.
In Tanzania in June a horrific train crash left more than 170 people dead. More than 1200 people were on the train when it rolled backwards and collided with a freight train going in the same direction.
Another train crash, this time in Egypt, claimed the lives of 363 people. Over one hundred of the victims were too badly burnt to be recognised and were buried after a mass funeral service in Cairo.
In the UK, a high-speed express train derailed on its way through a station north of London. One carriage leapt onto the platform, scattering waiting passengers and killing seven on board. The accident, the sixth fatal accident since 1997 on Britain's widely criticised rail network, raised more questions about rail safety.
Eight people were killed and dozens injured when a train derailed in northeastern Sicily. The express train was travelling from Messina to Palermo when it crashed into a bridge.
APTN
Huehuetenango, Guatemala - September 30, 2002
Aerial of crash area
Two shots of dead bodies of victims being rescued by fire department rescue team
APTN
Sacramento, Bolivia - September 2, 2002
Pan from rescue workers on side of road to ravine into which the bus slid
Various of rescue workers pulling a rope lifting victims out of the ravine
Various rescue worker scaling cliff face with victim on stretcher tied to a rope
APTN
Milan - April 18, 2002
Side view of Pirelli building with smoke coming out of side, pull out to street
Building with smoke coming out
Street covered in paper and emergency vehicle
APTN
Lviv - July 28, 2002
Various lists of injured at hospital
Relative with head in hands outside hospital
Relatives in car mourning
APTN
Lviv - July 30, 2002
Various funeral ceremony
Mothers crying on coffins
APTN
Luxembourg - November 6, 2002
Tail fin
Rescue workers
Crane above tail fin
Firemen carrying body
Rescue workers with crane
APTN
Igandu, Tanzania - June 25, 2002
Wide shot crash site
Derailed carriages
Rescue workers crawling through wreckage
Rescue workers examining wreckage
APTN
Ayyat, Egypt - February 20, 2002
Burnt out train
Rescue workers in carriage
Barred window
APTN
Potters Bar, Near London, England - May 10, 2002
Carriage of train wedged in between platform and canopy
Police standing next to wreckage on track
Wide shot platforms
APTN
Rometta, Sicily - July 21, 2002
Various derailed train
Police near train wreck
10:55:42
Hurricane/Typhoons
Hurricane Lili caused massive damage in October as it tore its way through the Caribbean. Thousands of people in Western Cuba fled their homes as the hurricane hit the island. There were no casualties in Cuba although the storm killed seven people in Jamaica and St. Vincent.
A week earlier, Hurrican Isidore passed by Cuba causing only heavy rains before it tore up to Mexico, its wind speeds increasing to up to 200 kilometres per hour (125 miles per hour). In Mexico's Yucatan peninsula, the hurricane caused massive damage, ripping up trees, tearing away roofs and blocking highways. Thousands were left homeless.
And in August over a hundred people died in unprecedented flooding across Europe. Rains unleashed raging waters that swept away Russian tourists, triggered landslides in Germany and Switzerland and shut down shipping on the Danube in Austria.
Saxony state capital Dresden was hit by high waters, which flooded the famed Semper Opera and the Zwinger palace.
The floods also devastated the Czech capital Prague. 250 residents and tourists had to be evacuated from the city's Old Town as the rain-engorged river Vltava crested.
In August in China, rising river levels killed more than 200 and threatened 10 million people. More than 250 thousand people were evacuated from areas around Dongting Lake.
APTN
Pinar del Rio, Cuba - October 1, 2002
Two shots of heavy rain falling on road during hurricane Lili
Top of trees blown by strong winds
APTN
Las Canas, Cuba - October 1, 2002
Roof of home damaged by winds
Various homes destroyed by Hurricane Lili
APTN
Merida, Yucatan, Mexico - September 23, 2002
Street blocked by fallen trees
Various debris in the streets
Fallen trees in Merida streets
10:56:27
Floods
APTN
Steyr, Austria - August 12, 2002
Buildings and flooded river
Building arch above flooded river, zoom out
Car in river
APTN
Deutschen Area, Germany - August 18, 2002
Various aerials flooded streets and fields near area where dyke collapsed
APTN
Bitterfeld, Germany - August 18, 2002
Various aerials Torgau town surrounded by lake of floodwater
APTN
Dresden, Germany - August 14, 2002
Flooded street with half submerged cars, rescue vehicles passes along
Amateur Video
Prague, Czech Republic - August 14, 2002
Zoom into man struggling in flood water underneath Prague bridge
APTN
Prague, Czech Republic - August 14, 2002
Various submerged river club
Various flooded part of the road, with water up to level of street signs
Various two men in dinghy in flooded road, water covers some ground floor windows
Various man in canoe, passing shops with water halfway up ground floor windows
Various of military unloading sandbags from trucks and making barrier by river
APTN
Lao Jie, Near Yueyang, China - August 22, 2002
Flooded town of Lao Jie, near Dongting Lake
Man on makeshift raft
Man in water opening door
Houses submerged in water
10:57:46
Oil Spills
A terrorist attack was responsible for a blast on the French supertanker the Limburg off the coast of Yemen in October. One Bulgarian member of the Limburg's crew died in the explosion that started a blaze aboard the tanker and spilled 90,000 barrels of oil.
And environmental disaster struck in Spain in November when the Prestige tanker sunk off its northern coast. Officials waited for the worst as oil leaked from the tanker's cargo. The ship first started leaking on November 13 after cracking its hull in a storm in the Atlantic Ocean. After six days, it finally sunk. The oil spilled contaminated a region that suffered another big spill a decade ago. The oil blackened hundreds of kilometers (miles) of beach and rocky shore and forced a ban on fishing and seafood harvesting along a 500 kilometer (300 mile) stretch. Tens of thousands of fishermen and other sea-dependent workers were forced to live off government handouts.
APTN
Mukalla, Yemen - October 8, 2002
Various aerials of Limburg supertanker with damage visible
Various oil washed up on the beach
APTN
Cape Finisterre, Northern Spain - November 20, 2002
Various aerials of area threatened by slick
APTN
Camarinas, Spanish coast - November 17, 2002
Various oil on rocks
APTN
Arteixo beach, Galicia, Spain - November 18, 2002
Oil slick on beach
Cormorant covered in oil flapping its wings
World Politics
10:58:37
World leaders signed the momentous NATO-Russia pact in Rome in May, hailed as the beginning of a new era in international relations. Leaders gathered at a military base near Rome for the signing of the agreement, which effectively made Russia junior partner in NATO by creating a NATO-Russia council.
In November, NATO leaders met in Prague where, in an historic shift, the organisation expanded its membership beyond the borders of the former Soviet Union. NATO invited seven ex-communist countries - Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Bulgaria, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia - to become members.
The summit, NATO's first beyond the old Iron Curtain, was marred slightly when two young Russian protestors threw tomatoes at the alliance's secretary general during the closing news conference. The protestors, shouting, 'Nato is worse than the Gestapo' missed George Robertson as he was shielded by officials.
In June, Rome played host to the United Nations World Food Summit. Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe skirted a travel ban to attend the conference amid complaints his policies were worsening the food crisis in the country. He said the future of agriculture in the country was improving and that his controversial land reform programme was a force for positive change. Zimbabwe's opposition accused the government of withholding food aid from its supporters even as the country was experiencing a major food crisis. By November, more than half the population of 12.5 million was facing famine.
In June, world leaders from the Group of Eight met in a remote mountain resort in Canada, avoiding the kind of mass anti-globalisation protests that in previous years have accompanied such summits. While the protests took place in the valley below, and in the Canadian capital, the leaders held bilateral and group meetings, discussing terrorism., economic growth and the Middle East.
Johannesburg was the setting for the ten-day Earth Summit, last held in Rio, Brazil, a decade earlier. World leaders and extensive delegations arrived with the aim of agreeing a world plan to tackle poverty and save the environment. The summit was billed as the largest UN gathering ever. US President George W Bush was notable by his absence from the summit, a fact denounced by environmental groups. But US delegates at the conference dismissed scepticism that the US was not committed to sustainable development. Daily protests, taking place at the perimeter of the UN convention centre, accompanied the summit. A group calling themselves "Indian and African farmers" held a colourful protest against the Common Agricultural Policy which gives European farmers subsidies. But not all the protests were peaceful. One night anti-globalisation protestors clashed with police at a Johannesburg university. The police fired stun grenades at the crowd. On another night riot police used water cannons against pro-Palestinian activists who tried to storm a police station to rescue companions arrested earlier in the day for trying to confront Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres.
APTN
Rome, Italy - May 28, 2002
Exteriors of military base where summit was held
NATO Secretary General George Robertson and Russian President Vladimir Putin walking
Overhead interior of round table
Leaders at table
Putin
SOUNDBITE (English) George W Bush, US President
"Two former foes are now joined together as partners, overcoming 50 years of division and a decade of uncertainty, as this partnership takes us closer to an even larger goal - a Europe that is whole, free and at peace for the first time in history."
Various Putin signing
Pan of leaders posing for a photo
APTN
Prague, Czech Republic - November 21, 2002
Conference Hall
Various delegates at NATO conference
APTN
Prague, Czech Republic - November 22, 2002
Two men standing and throwing tomatoes and starting shouting
Protestors start shouting at Robertson, one wearing an arm band takes off his coat
Protestors being escorted by security
Robertson standing with conference officials in blue coats
APTN
Rome, Italy - June 10, 2002
Exterior Food and Agriculture Organisation headquarters where the UN World Food Summit took place
Various Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe arriving
South African President Thabo Mbeki arriving
Interior conference - Various UN Secretary General Kofi Annan meeting Mugabe
Conference
Mugabe walking to podium
SOUNDBITE (English) Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwean President
"Contrary to widely disseminated misrepresentations by our detractors, there is now a brighter future for our farming community across colour, gender, and ethnic divides. Our land reform programme is indeed a firm launching pad for your fight against poverty and food insecurity."
POOL
Calgary, Canada - June 25, 2002
Canadian flag
German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder refusing to put on welcoming white cowboy hat, instead placing it on official
Pan view as helicopters head to Kannanaskis
APTN
Kannanaskis, Canada - June 26, 2002
Wide interior meeting room
Leaders at family photo opportunity with mountains in the background
POOL
Johannesburg, South Africa - September 2, 2002
Various aerials of Johannesburg
Former South African President Nelson Mandela, walking
Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe arriving
APTN
Johannesburg, South Africa - August 29, 2002
Puppet of US President George W Bush at mock theatre event to protest his absence from the summit
APTN
Johannesburg, South Africa - August 28, 2002
Various farmers holding banners reading "freedom to trade" and "trade not aid"
APTN
Johannesburg, South Africa - August 24, 2002
Various of protestors marching with candles
Audio of stun grenades exploding, crowd running away
APTN
Johannesburg, South Africa - September 2, 2002
Tracking shot along line of riot police with water cannon tenders behind
Water cannon trucks spray mob of chanting pro-Palestinian activists outside police station where other activists earlier in the day had been taken
US Politics and Economics
11:02:25
The US justice department opened an investigation into collapsed energy firm Enron. Many Enron employees lost their life savings when the company filed for bankruptcy on December 2. Arthur Anderson, the firm responsible for checking Enron's books, fired the man who handled the Enron account. David Duncan shredded documents after learning Enron was under government investigation. He said he was acting on the advice of an Andersen lawyer. The situation brought into question the practice firms like Arthur Andersen acting as auditors as well as advisers on how to maximise a company's profits.
Telecommunications giant WorldCom joined the list of spectacular corporate collapses in June when it too applied for bankruptcy. A month earlier, it had disclosed it had inflated profits by nearly four POOL billion dollars through deceptive accounting. It was the largest bankruptcy in US history. WorldCom, based in Clinton, Mississippi, announced it would lay off 17 thousand workers, or 20 percent of its global workforce. A US Congressional panel launched an investigation into WorldCom's accounting irregularities.
In a bid to restore investor confidence President George W Bush signed into law a far-reaching government crackdown on business fraud. Bush said the new legislation should act as a warning to corporate criminals. The measure tightened regulation of companies' financial reporting and provided a new oversight of independent auditors.
Share prices on Wall Street tumbled, increasing fears about a US recession.
Meanwhile, the FBI warned Al Qaida could be planning another terrorist attack. The White House said Americans should remain vigilant.
But the FBI also came under fire. FBI director Robert Mueller told a Congressional hearing into FBI failures that the organisation was aware of the need for massive change, especially in its cumbersome bureaucracy.
APTN
Houston, Texas - November 29, 2001
Exterior views of Enron office
APTN
Houston, Texas - November 29, 2001
Close up employees loading boxes into car
Pan up from employees to Enron building
APTN
Washington DC - January 15, 2002
Various investigators looking at Enron documents
APTN
Washington DC - February 2002
Enron Chief Executive Office Kenneth Lay entering Senate Committee hearing
Wide shot committee hearing
Chicago, Illinois - File
Arthur Andersen headquarters
Interior Arthur Andersen headquarters
APTN
Ashburn, Virginia - June 28, 2002
Various exteriors of WorldCom offices
APTN
Washington DC - June 28, 2002
Various subpoena sent to WorldCom CEOs by House Financial Committee
POOL
Clinton, Mississippi - File
Pan of WorldCom employees at terminals
Close up fibre optic device
POOL
Washington DC - July 8, 2002
Witnesses raise their right hand and are sworn in at congressional hearing into WorldCom
SOUNDBITE (English) John Sidgmore, WorldCom's president and chief executive officer
"We are fighting for our life. I think that should be clear to everybody if you read the newspapers."
POOL
Washington DC - July 30, 2002
US President George W Bush walks into room in White House
SOUNDBITE (English) George W Bush, US President
"This law says to every dishonest corporate leader, you will be exposed and punished. The era of low standards and false profits is over. No boardroom in America is above or beyond the law."
APTN
New York City - July 22, 2002
New York Stock Exchange exterior
NYSE interior pan across floor
NYSE closing bell
APTN
Washington DC - FILE
FBI headquarters
CIA headquarters
POOL
Washington DC - June 6, 2002
Congressional hearing into FBI failures
SOUNDBITE (English) Robert Mueller, FBI Director
"The need for change was apparent even before September 11. It has become even more urgent since then."
European Politics and Economics
11:04:50
12 European countries ushered in the New Year with the introduction of a new currency, the euro. As firework displays in the capitals celebrated the new year and the new currency, revellers flocked to the cash machines for their first look at the brightly coloured new notes. At a ceremony in Vienna, Austria, EC President Romano Prodi, said the euro would strengthen the European Union. More than 15 billion notes and 52 billion coins were produced for the switchover.
European Union expansion came closer to reality. 2004 was set as a date for eight east European nations, and Malta and Cyprus, to join the union. EU Commission President Romano Prodi said the move would be an historic achievement.
There was shock and anger in France when far right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen came second in a first round presidential vote, ahead of incumbent Prime Minister Lionel Jospin who had been expected to go head to head with President Jacques Chirac in the second round run-off. Anti-Le Pen demonstrators clashed with police in Paris and in other French cities. In the event, Chirac won re-election by a landslide, but the first round results were a stark warning about the rise of the far right, both in France and the rest of Europe.
In July, Chirac survived an assassination attempt after a man fired at him from the crowd during Bastille Day celebrations. The attacker, who was described as an emotionally disturbed Neo-Nazi, pulled a rifle from a guitar case and fired off one shot before he was wrestled to the ground. Chirac was riding an open-topped jeep just tens of metres (yards) away. Cries of alarm from the crowd alerted police, who wrestled him to the ground with the help of spectators.
In the Netherlands, right-wing leader Pim Fortuyn was gunned down outside a radio station in Hilversum where he had been giving an interview. The killer was animal rights activist Volkert van der Graaf who was caught moments after the killing with the gun still cocked. The killing shocked the Netherlands and thousands of mourners gathered outside Fortuyn's Rotterdam house to pay their respects.
VNR
FILE
Euro notes being printed
APTN
Vienna, Austria - January 1, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Romano Prodi, European Commission President
"Our wish is that the euro is the beginning of a stronger European Union. We shall be the best in the world, the best in the world."
APTN
Athens, Greece - January 1, 2002
Fireworks being launched into the sky
Euro pyramid
Euro pyramid being lit up
APTN
Maastricht, The Netherlands - January 1, 2002
Acrobat swinging from euro tree
Various of performer in giant euro coin
APTN
Paris, France - January 1, 2002
People spraying champagne in the Champs Elysee
APTN
Paris, France - July 16, 2002
Wide shot Eiffel Tower
APTN
Paris, France - May 5, 2002
Boards outside polling station, swastika on Jean-Marie Le Pen poster
Far right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen voting
APTN
Paris, France - April 21, 2002
Noel Mamere, protest leader and defeated presidential candidate for the Green Party, chanting "Down with the National Front"
APTN
Paris, France - April 22, 2002
Demonstrators scuffling with police, one having tear gas sprayed in his face
POOL
Paris, France - July 14, 2002
Close up Jacques Chirac in jeep with audio of gunshot
APTN
Rotterdam, The Netherlands - May 10, 2002
Mourners at grave of murdered Dutch right-wing politician Pim Fortuyn
APTN
Rotterdam, The Netherlands - May 6, 2002
Mourners approach house, man salutes Pim Fortuyn's house
Africa politics
11:06:16
Zimbabwe in March held presidential elections. Incumbent Robert Mugabe won by a landslide, but there were widespread reports of vote-fixing and political violence. The Commonwealth suspended Zimbabwe from its councils for one year because of the violence. Meanwhile Mugabe continued his drive to evict white farmers from their land, as part of his land reform campaign. About 95 percent of Zimbabwe's white-owned farms were earmarked for redistribution to blacks. The land seizure policies, combined with a massive drought, contributed towards massive food shortages. Farmers who resisted eviction often fell victim to militia violence, ignored by the police.
The Miss World competition was moved to London after religious rioting in Nigeria killed more than 200 people. The rioting began in the northern Nigerian city of Kaduna after a newspaper published an article that said the Muslim prophet Mohammed would have approved of the event.
In Madagascar, there was political upheaval following a disputed presidential election in December 2001. Popular Marc Ravalomanana, the mayor of the capital, Antananarivo, claimed he'd won more than half of the vote, and that therefore it shouldn't go to a second round. In February Ravalomanana declared himself president. Incumbent Didier Ratskira proclaimed martial law that sparked violence on a massive scale. 11 people were shot and killed in one day by Ratskira's supporters. Eventually, after a six-month struggle, the US and France recognised Ravalomanana as the legitimate leader. Ratsiraka flew to France and his forces on the island switched sides.
In the Ivory Coast a month long rebellion came to an end when rebels signed a truce to open talks with the government. Tuo Fozie, a rebel official, signed the cease-fire with West African mediators in the city of Bouake, in rebel hands since the uprising began with a bloody coup attempt on September 19.
The rebels seized much of the northern half of the country. At the core of the insurgency were 750-800 ex-soldiers, many dismissed from Ivory Coast's army for suspected disloyalty. The uprising, which killed hundreds of people, gathered support from Ivorians in the north, who complain that the country's southern-based government treats them poorly.
There was international outrage as news emerged that a woman in Nigeria had been sentenced to death by stoning for adultery. Safiya Hussaini was sentenced in October by an Islamic court after she conceived a child with a married neighbour. An appeal court eventually acquitted her.
APTN
Harare, Zimbabwe - March 9, 2002
Journalists, pan to Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe putting paper in ballot box
Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, of the Movement for Democratic Change, walking towards camera outside his home
Various of MDC supporters with bandages on their faces speaking to journalists saying they were attacked
APTN
London, England - March 19, 2002
Round table of Commonwealth troika (with Australian Prime Minister John Howard, South African President Thabo Mbeki and Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo) and Commonwealth Secretary General Don McKinnon
APTN
Marondera, Zimbabwe - August 16, 2002
Wide shot of belongings on lawn after farmer Althea Morgan was forced to leave her farm at gunpoint
SOUNDBITE (English) Althea Morgan, Farm owner
"They just said you've got five hours to get out, and they stood and watched over us with their guns."
APTN
Darwendale, Zimbabwe - September 9, 2002
Farmer Debbie Swales being comforted after being evicted
Various trucks leaving Swales' farm with their belongings
APTN
Abuja, Nigeria - November 23, 2002
Beauty queens in hotel lobby
Kaduna, Nigeria - November 23, 2002
Fire in the street during violence in Kaduna which erupted because of Miss World competition
Building with smoke billowing out
Zoom into church
Body on ground
APTN
Antananarivo, Madagascar - February 4, 2002
Various shots of thousands of protestors in Antananarivo's Independence Square, calling for Marc Ravalomanana to be president
APTN
Antananarivo, Madagascar - March 3, 2002
Armed soldiers in the street
Various crowd standing in front of flames
Audio tear gas being fired, opposition supporters running through the streets
Soldiers in street
APTN
Bouake, Ivory Coast - October 17, 2002
Tuo Fozie, rebel official, arriving with rebel delegation
Wide of mediators
Senegalese Foreign Minister Cheikh Tidiane Gadio and Fozie signing
Handshake
APTN
Sokoto State, Nigeria - March 25, 2002
Court room hearing stoning case
Safiya Hussaini laughing as she hears of acquittal
Interior court
Various of Hussaini and 15 month old baby girl Adama
Muslim judges leaving court after acquittal
Latin American News and Politics
11:09:06
Colombia's 38-year civil war continued into 2002. Bogota was wracked by a wave of terrorist attacks, most of them blamed on the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC. In January a blast in the capital Bogota killed four policemen and a child. The bomb exploded in a restaurant often frequented by police officers from a nearby police station. Then, on the day of President Alvaro Uribe's inauguration in August, at least six small bombs exploded in several Bogota neighbourhoods. No one was killed but the blasts caused massive damage to property. Uribe, the survivor of several assassination attempts, took the oath of office in the parliament building, foregoing the usual outdoor inauguration ceremony. In September police announced they had captured four people involved in the August 7 assassination attempt.
Unrest continued in Argentina over the economic crisis which lead to the collapse of President Fernando de la Rua's government in December. Protestors demanding better employment rights and the end of a bank freeze, clashed with riot police in the capital and other cities.
Farmers' protests forced the Mexican government to back out of plans to build a new six-runway airport on the capital's outskirts. In an explosive five-day standoff in July, the farmers, who said they would not receive sufficient compensation for having the airport built on their land, blocked roads and took 15 hostages, threatening to kill them. They handed over the hostages in exchange for the release of several fellow protestors. And afterwards the government said it would cancel plans to build the airport in San Salvado Atenco.
APTN
Bogota, Colombia - January 25, 2002
Street where bomb exploded
Police truck and dead body
Restaurant where bomb exploded
Police working around police truck and damage
APTN
Bogota, Colombia - August 7, 2002
Various shots of cars with smashed windows following explosion on the same day as Uribe's inauguration
Soldiers looking at blast area
Broken window of building
POOL
Bogota, Colombia - August 7, 2002
Various Colombian President Alvaro Uribe receiving presidential sash
APTN
Bogota, Colombia - September 13, 2002
Various people accused of being behind Uribe assassination attempt, being displayed to the press
Various weapons seized
APTN
Buenos Aires, Argentina - January 15, 2002
Protestors
Casa Rosada (presidential palace) with guard at fenced gate, pan to protestors wearing bandanas covering their faces
APTN
Buenos Aires, Argentina - January 11, 2002
Riot police
Shirtless rioters throwing rocks and missiles at riot police
Various of riot police throwing tear gas
Pull back from smashed window of bank with graffiti
APTN
San Salvador Atenco, Mexico - July 12, 2002
Road blocked by trucks in protest at planned airport
Farmer making club
Burnt car being used as a barricade
Boxes filled with petrol bombs
APTN
Outside San Salvador Atenco, Mexico - July 12, 2002
Various youths with machetes sitting in the back of a pick-up truck
Various state police trucks
APTN
San Salvador Atenco, Mexico - July 13, 2002
Farmers at roadblock
Graffiti saying 'No airport'
Wide of hostages being held by farmers
APTN
San Salvador Atenco, Mexico - July 15, 2002
Farmers gathered, raising their machetes
Wide hostages being released
Pope John Paul II
11:11:36
Despite his age and frailty, Pope John Paul II showed no sign of moderating his schedule. His travel in 2002 included tours places as far flung as Mexico, Canada and Azerbaijan.
In Italy he held a day of prayers for world peace in Assisi, the birthplace of St. Francis. He also made a one-day visit to Ischia, an Italian island in the Mediterranean Sea near Capri. He used that occasion to make an appeal for peace in the Middle East, an appeal he repeated throughout the year as the conflict between the Palestinians and the Israelis escalated.
In May, the 82-year-old pope looked increasingly exhausted during a trip to Bulgaria and Azerbaijan. Throughout the visit, the Pontiff was wheeled around on a special trolley. Nonetheless he had a packed schedule which included a visit by helicopter to the Rila Monastery, one of Bulgaria's holiest sites.
In August the Pope attended the World Youth Day celebrations in Toronto, Canada. He surprised many by walking down the stairs of his plane. But a week later, in Guatemala, he used a lift to disembark.
Later that month, the Pope made an emotional trip, possibly his last, back to his native Poland. Following mass in Krakow, he stopped at the house he once shared with his father. Residents of Tyniecka Street chanted, "Welcome home" as the popemobile stopped outside No. 10, the grey two-storey building that used to be his home.
POOL
Assisi, Italy - January 24, 2002
Pope seated in train
Pope being met by Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi
Exterior church
Various Christian prayer session with the Pope and Orthodox representative
POOL
Ischia Island , Italy - May 5, 2002
Marquee and Island
Pope entering mass
Pope singing prayer, then crossing himself, doves being released
Doves flying away
APTN
Baku, Azerbaijan - May 22, 2002
Pope meeting Azerbaijan's president Geidar Aliev
APTN
Toronto, Canada - July 23, 2002
Pope blessing children
POOL
Toronto, Canada - July 25, 2002
Pope walking onto stage
Pope smiling on stage
APTN
Guatemala City, Guatemala - July 29, 2002
Band playing national anthem
Pope standing
Pope waving to crowd
Close up Pope
POOL
Mexico City, Mexico - July 31/August 1, 2002
Aztec horn player
Pope blessing bread for ceremony
Woman taking bread from Pope
Various Indian women approaching altar and blessing him
APTN
Krakow, Poland - August 17, 2002
Plaque outside house
'Tyniecka 10' sign
Pope in popemobile arriving at house where he used to live with his father
Pope waving
The British Royal Family
11:14:05
2002 was the 50th jubilee for Britain's Queen Elizabeth II. But it was a year tinged with sadness for the Queen, with the loss of her sister Princess Margaret and Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, within weeks of each other.
Princess Margaret died aged 71 in February, having suffered at least two strokes in previous years.
Weeks later, on March 30th, the Queen Mother also passed away, aged 101. The Queen Mother held an unshakeable place in British affections for more than half a century, and thousands lined the streets of London to catch a glimpse of her funeral cortege. Her grandson, Prince Charles, paid tribute to her.
The public outpouring of grief following the deaths appeared to increase sympathy and support for the Queen and there was a genuine sense of celebration surrounding the jubilee in June. One of the highlights was a massive rock concert held at Buckingham Palace and relayed on massive screens to tens of thousands of fans in the plaza below the palace. The next day one million people turned out for a day of pomp, pageantry and carnival to crown the jubilee.
The trial of Princess Diana's former butler Paul Burrell collapsed after an intervention by the Queen. Burrell had been accused of stealing Diana's personal belongings after her death. Police removed around 300 items belonging to the princess from Mr. Burrell's home and it was a central part of the prosecution that he had told no one about the items. However the case fell through when the Queen mentioned to her son Prince Charles that Mr. Burrell had told her he was looking after some of Diana's things.
APTN
London, England - February 6, 2002
Queen Elizabeth II signs a large picture of herself while opening cancer centre at a hospital on the 50th anniversary of her father's death
POOL
London, England - August 4, 2000
Princess Margaret, Queen and Queen Mother walk out onto balcony of Buckingham Palace for Queen Mother's 100th birthday
APTN
London, England - August 4, 2001
Close up Princess Margaret in wheelchair
APTN
London, England - February 9, 2002
Buckingham Palace with flag flying at half mast to mark death of Princess Margaret
POOL
Windsor, England - February 15, 2002
Various Royal family walking down road towards the chapel doors for funeral of Princess Margaret
Coffin being carried down castle stairs
Coffin being carried towards hearse, coming to a halt
Queen, Prince Philip, and Viscount Linley and Lady Sarah Chatto watching from castle steps, the Queen wipes a tear from her eye
APTN
Windsor, England - March 31, 2002
Exterior Windsor Castle where Queen Mother died
APTN
London, England - March 31, 2002
Various of horse guards trotting along road
Various of floral tribute to the Queen Mother
APTN
London, England - April 1, 2002
Close up picture of Queen Mother on Union Jack left next to flowers
41 gun salute in Hyde Park
POOL
Windsor, England - April 1, 2002
Various shots of Queen Mother's coffin in chapel
POOL
London, England - April 1, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Prince Charles
"Ever since I was a child, I adored her. Her houses were always filled with an atmosphere of fun, laughter and affection."
POOL
Windsor, England - April 2, 2002
Queen Mother's coffin being carried out of Royal Chapel of All Saints
Coffin being loaded onto hearse
APTN
London, England - April 2, 2002
Dawn shot of Westminster and Big Ben
POOL
London, England - June 3, 2002
Night shots
Aerial of Buckingham Palace with crowd in grounds for jubilee concert
Close up, pan round Brian May, formerly of the rock group Queen, playing guitar
Pull out from May playing the British national anthem on guitar on top of the palace
SOUNDBITE (English) Prince Charles (on stage with the rest of the royal family)
"Mummy."
POOL
London, England - June 4, 2002
Wide of crowds in Mall
Flags waving
Queen and Prince Philip look up
APTN
Angola - File
Princess Diana and Paul Burrell during visit to Angola
30 Second Features
11:16:32
Boxers Mike Tyson and Lennox Lewis exchanged punches at a pre-fight press conference in New York City in January. After Tyson was introduced he walked on stage then faced the wing where Lewis was to enter. When Lewis stepped onto the stage, Tyson rushed him. After a tussle lasting several minutes, order was restored.
APTN
New York City, United States - January 22, 2002
Confrontation at news briefing between boxers Mike Tyson and Lennox Lewis, zoom into fight, pull out to wide shot of fight with cameramen surrounding the boxers
UPSOUND (English) Mike Tyson, shouting expletives
11:17:03
A group of young artists from Austria introduced a new strain of music to Europe. Spectators packed a concert hall in Brussels to hear 'The First Vienna Vegetable Orchestra', who makes all its music with vegetables. Carrots and cucumbers are handcrafted into wind instruments, pumpkins and leeks are the percussion, cabbage covers the strings.
APTN
Brussels, Belgium - September 21, 2002
Brochure reading 'The First Vienna Vegetable Orchestra'
Band arriving on stage
Various of band playing music using various vegetables as instruments
11:17:33
In January, fanciful ice sculptures of all shapes and sizes transformed one of China's northern-most cities into a winter wonderland. Harbin city is known for its subarctic climate. It really comes into its own when artisans gather for the annual Ice Lantern Festival. From January 5 to February 14 ice sculptures in the shape of animals and people line the streets. The largest display of sculpted ice and snow was this year located on the north bank of the Songhua River. 80-thousand cubic metres of ice and 120-thousand cubic metres of snow were used to create the frozen fantasy land, which spans an area of roughly 300-thousand square metres. At night the sculptures were illuminated from the inside with coloured lights. This year saw the 16th International Ice Sculpting Competition take place. Artisans from eleven different countries competed in the contest, which this year was won by Japan.
APTN
Harbin, China - January 2002
Night shots of fireworks exploding over Harbin
European-style ice building
Chinese-style ice building
Buddha snow sculpture at Zhaolin Park
Large mosque ice sculpture
Various people sliding down illuminated green ice ramp on side of mosque
Ice sculptures from competition
Winning ice sculpture
11:18:02
An internet website in Taiwan gave new meaning to the phrase 'news in brief,' because its three female presenters read the news wearing only their underwear. The 'Underview News,' was launched on January 7th on the website run by Taiwan's largest telecom company, Chunghua Telecom. The anchors, in their 20s, appear in carefully selected underwear.
APTN
Taipei, Taiwan - January 28, 2002
UPSOUND (Mandarin) Cameraman
"Four, three, two.."
Anchor reading news in underwear
Various clips from news broadcast on internet
APTN
Taipei, Taiwan - January 30, 2002
People sitting in front of monitors in an internet café
SOUNDBITE (Mandarin) Vox pop
"People would lose interest in this if the anchors didn't take their clothes off."
APTN
Taipei, Taiwan - January 28, 2002
Various editors at work in the studio
11:18:23
A Thai woman set an unofficial world record in October for spending 32 days in a roomful of 3400 scorpions. Kanchana Ketkeaw, a performance artist, was stung nine times during the attempt but she was not put off. She was already used to scorpions because she performs with them as part of a tourist attraction, putting them in her mouth and dancing with them.
APTN
Pattaya, Thailand - September 21, 2002
Kanchana Ketkeaw, in room full of scorpions
Scorpions on Kanchana
APTN
Pattaya, Thailand - October 23, 2002
Scorpion on Kanchana's neck
Various of Kanchana kissing scorpion
Last day of countdown calendar being peeled off
Kanchana stepping out of glass room with scorpions on shirt
11:19:02
Egyptian archaeologists made a startling discovery - six tombs dating back some 3,500 years to Egypt's golden age. The tombs were found near the house of the Old Kingdom near Cairo.
APTN
Saqqara - June 6, 2002
Wide of site and pyramid in background
Various of archaeologist brushing inscriptions
Close up inscriptions
Tilt down tomb
Various of site
Close up small statue found in one of the tombs
11:19:35
About 50 artists and architects displayed their visions for the rebuilding of the World Trade Center site at an exhibition in New York. While many designs had memorial aspects, only a few actually called for the entire 16-acre site to be made into a memorial.
APTN
New York City - January 25, 2002
Various shots of Max Protetch Gallery and close ups of works submitted
11:20:04
The United States Geological Survey (USGS) and NASA celebrated the 30th anniversary of Landsat, a photo-imaging programme that has been pictorially mapping the Earth's geographical changes over the decades. The 30-year archive of imagery, a scientific partnership between NASA and the USGS, provides historical detail that can help scientists understand and protect the planet.
In celebration of the 30th anniversary of the first Landsat launch, NASA and the USGS assembled an exhibit with 41 images taken over the last 30 years.
NASA
NASA - pictures taken from space
Aleutian clouds
Kalahari desert, Namibia
Terkezi Oasis, Chad
Iraqi emplacement
Great Salt Desert, Iran
Whirlpool in the air off Greenland
Richat structure, Mauritania
Lena Delta, Russia
Ganges River Delta
Volga River Delta
Enlarged portion of US showing smoke from Arizona wildfires (June 21, 2002)
Stop Press
11:20:54
Indonesian police announced they'd caught up with the two prime suspects for the Bali bombing in September. Amrozi, who like many Indonesians only uses one name, was displayed before the media. Police said Amrozi admitted owning a L3000 Mitsubishi minivan that was filled with at least 50 kilogrammes (110 pounds) of explosives.
APTN
Bali, Indonesia
Amrozi in handcuffs being brought into room
Indonesian police chief Da'I Bachtiar showing Amrozi to media, Amrozi sits down
Amrozi smiling
Amrozi's handcuffs being taken off
Close up Amrozi
Amrozi waving to media outside
11:21:44
Terrorists struck again in November, targeting holidaying Israelis in Mombasa, Kenya. A jeep packed with explosives smashed into a hotel lobby, just minutes after a large group of Israelis had left. Two Israeli boys were killed, along with their 61-year-old Israeli tour guide and 10 Kenyans. Minutes before the hotel bombing, two Strela missiles were fired and narrowly missed an Israeli charter plane departing from Mombasa's airport.
APTN
Paradise Hotel, Kikambala, Near Mombasa - November 29, 2002
Various of explosion site
Close up burnt out car
Kenyan President Daniel Arap Moi walking round site of the explosion
Two rocket launchers being unveiled
SOUNDBITE (English) Daniel Arap Moi, Kenyan President
"I want to tell you Western people, don't welcome anybody as a friend - there are no friends, accept those who love you. Kenya's government is going to pursue it. I cannot say much, but we'll do the best we can."
APTN
Kikambala, Near Mombasa - November 29, 2002
Three dancers in hotel lobby before attack (these three women were all killed), pan round to show Noy an Dvir Anter, two Israeli boys who were killed, with their father Rami Anter (in black and white top), who survived
Fire visible from round corner of building
Smoke rising
Injured person being carried
People wrapping bandages round wounded man's eyes
11:23:07
End
Storyline
World News Review 2002
00:00 Titles
Terrorism
10:00:30
Bali bomb
In October, terrorists with suspected links to Al Qaida struck in the heart of Indonesia's tourist centre, setting off two enormous bombs outside two busy nightclubs. More than 180 people, many of them Australians, were killed. Dozens were injured
Following the blast, the popular Sari club and other nightspots around it were a mass of smouldering ruins. Witnesses described scenes of terror immediately after the explosion in the town of Kuta. Bloodied survivors fled the club, some with limbs blown off. Cars and motorbikes on the road in front were alight, forming a wall of flames blocking people's escape.
For the first time, Indonesia's government acknowledged Al Qaida was active on its soil, prompting a huge crackdown on extremists.
A week after the bombing, family and friends of those who died joined in a memorial service near the site of the blast. Relatives took the opportunity to survey the damage, stopping to pray in front of the hundreds of flowers left in memory of those who died.
APTN
Kuta, Bali
13/10/2002
Night shots -
Pull out burning building
Various shots of corpses
Firemen with hose
Various shots of burnt out cars with blackened corpses
Various shots of corpses
Various shots rescue workers remove body
Pan burnt out vehicles
Day shots
Various shots burning buildings
Zoom in burnt arm hanging our of car window
Two shots of bomb/fire damaged buildings
Various aerials of the blast site
Wide shot through wreckage of firefighters spraying water at smoking remains of building
Area destroyed by blast and fire
Various shots of emergency workers carrying Western woman on stretcher
(in hospital) SOUNDBITE (English) Ryan James (16), Injured holiday maker from Sydney
"I was in the club, the Sari club, we heard a loud noise, an explosion and then we turned round to see what it was and then before we could say anything there was another huge explosion right next to us and I was on the ground."
Tilt down wall register of patients in hospital
20/10/2002
Various people walking around bomb wreckage before memorial service for victims of the bombing
People praying in front of flowered shrine
SOUNDBITE (English) Rob Lewis, Father of victim
"A lot of different mixed emotions running through me. Anger, sadness - words just can't explain it, you know. I lost my son over there. Sorry man."
10:03:39
The Faces of Indonesian Terrorism
The Bali bombings threw the spotlight on Indonesia's main fundamentalist Islamic group, Jemaah Islamiyah. APTN obtained pictures of fighters from the group in training - alongside members of the Abu Sayyaf guerrilla group which operates in the Philippines In an interview, the man said to be the leader of Jemaah Islamiyah, Abu Dakar Bashir, spoke out strongly against the United States.
APTN
Indonesia, 2001 (exact date and location unknown)
Lines of Jemaah Islamiyah fighters marching with weapons
Fighters stepping on each others bodies
Fighters watch martial arts demonstration
Cianjur, West Java, 23 September, 2002
Alleged leader of Jemaah Islamiyah, Abu Dakar Bashir reading magazine
SOUNDBITE (Bahasa Indonesia) Abu Dakar Bashir, alleged leader of Jemaah Islamiyah
"My message to Americans is to warn their arrogant government. The current American president is the worst American president ever. The actions of the American government at the moment may bring harm to the American people."
10:04:25
The Moscow Siege
Terrorism also hit Europe in October, when Chechen rebels seized a Moscow theatre during the staging of a musical, taking hundreds of people captive. 18 of the attackers were women. They mined the theatre and threatened to blow it up unless Russian President Vladimir Putin withdrew troops from Chechnya. On the day the theatre was seized, some people managed to escape, as seen in dramatic footage filmed by Moscow's rescue services.
Three days later, in a pre-dawn raid, Russian special forces stormed the building, killing the 41 militants. At least 129 of the hostages also died, most of them felled by a narcotic gas used to knock out the rebels before the special forces stormed in. Russia held a national day of mourning for the victims amid rising criticism of the authorities over the number of hostages killed in the operation. Doctors treating the survivors complained their work had been hampered by not knowing exactly what gas had been used by the special forces. Many of the survivors were loaded unconscious onto buses outside the theatre after their rescue.
APTN
Moscow 23 and 24 October 2002
Various armoured personnel carriers encircling the theatre that was under siege
Mid shot elite Russian troops
Moscow Rescue Services
Moscow 23, October, 2002
(Night shots and mute)
Wide shot armed security officers in cover beside wall one officer takes aim with handgun
Three women run out of building, along wall and take cover with security officers
Three women running
APTN
Moscow 26, October, 2002 - Night shots
Various emergency vehicles, lights flashing, moving in to receive the wounded
Various troops milling around
Various wide of theatre with gunfire and explosions inside
Troops move into position inside building
Exterior shot of soldiers with arrested person
Russian Federal Security Bureau
Moscow 26, October, 2002 - Interior shots of theatre (mute)
Mid shot floor covered in shattered glass
Various dead female hostage takers slumped in theatre chairs
Various of dead man in civilian clothes lying on floor
Grenades, explosives and other military equipment
APTN
Moscow, 26, October, 2002
Close shot of notice saying the name of the play, Nord Ost, that was playing when the siege began
Various shots of man hugging crying woman outside hospital
Doctors in hospital attending to a former hostage
Various night shots of scene after special forces raided theatre
APTN
Moscow 28, October, 2002
Wide shot theatre, pan to flowers and tributes outside
Close up flowers and candles
SOUNDBITE (Russian) Nadeshda, Muscovite
"People need to know the whole truth - what kind of gas was used, what is the treatment against its side effects and what consequences it could bring. People have the right to know the truth."
10:06:58
Iraq
The United States mounted pressure on Iraq, saying the country was part of an axis of evil supporting and funding terrorism. The topic was an important part of discussions in Texas between US President George W Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who agreed the world would be better off without Saddam Hussein in power.
Then, the Washington Post newspaper reported it had uncovered a leaked White House plan to topple Saddam with US special forces troops and CIA agents. The plan won wide support from US political leaders. In September the British government consolidated its position of cooperation with the US when Blair released a dossier of evidence of the military capabilities of Saddam Hussein. The document claimed the Iraqi leader was trying to acquire nuclear weapons and had extended its range of ballistic missiles.
Iraq responded by taking international journalists to sites that the US believed were used to develop weapons of mass destruction, in a bid to discredit the claims.
Iraq maintained that one site, suspected by the US of being a factory for the production of chemical and biological agents, 100 kilometres west of Baghdad, was nothing more than a pesticide factory. And Iraq announced on September 16th that it would allow UN weapons inspectors back into the country.
Meanwhile, the US media war was also mounting. In Defence department briefings, journalists were shown video of Iraqi anti-aircraft missiles being fired at US and British warplanes patrolling over the no-fly zones. US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said it was proof Iraq regularly violated UN resolutions.
While the United States went on the diplomatic attack, Saddam Hussein tried to remain defiant. But he could not ignore a United Nations Security Council resolution calling for the disarmament of Iraq under the observation of United Nations weapons inspectors. The resolution, which was approved by every member of the council, said if Iraq did not disarm it would face 'serious consequences' that would almost certainly mean war. The leaders of the US and Britain hailed the resolution.
Iraqi TV
Baghdad - April 7, 2002
Mid shot Saddam Hussein during meeting with top military brass
POOL
Crawford, Texas - April 6, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Tony Blair, British Prime Minister
"Would the region, the world and not least the ordinary Iraqi people be better off without the regime of Saddam Hussein? The only answer that anyone can give to that question would be 'yes.'"
SOUNDBITE (English) George W Bush, United States President
"He's a man who obviously has something to hide. He told the world that he would show us he would not develop weapons of mass destruction and yet over the past decade he's refused to do so."
APTN
Washington DC - June 16, 2002
Various shots of Washington Post article covering the leaked White House plan
Iraqi TV
Baghdad - January 20, 2002
Close up Saddam Hussein
Pan to Iraqi officials
APTN
London - September 24, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Paul Beaver, Military Intelligence Expert (talking about British dossier of evidence against Iraq)
"There was no single killer fact in this document which I was looking for but what there is is a body of evidence that leads me to conclude that Saddam Hussein is a threat militarily."
APTN
Nassr/Taji Steel Fabrication and Military Production Facility, 25 kilometres north of Baghdad - 10 October, 2002
Exterior factory with military being escorted inside
Wide pan interior factory
Iraqi factory, 100 kilometres west of Baghdad - August 28, 2002
Various of reporters entering the site, suspected of being chemical and biological agents factory
Pan of barrels containing pesticides
SOUNDBITE (English) Husam Mohammed Ameen, Head of the Iraqi National Monitoring Commission
"The monitoring inspection teams visited this site tens of times, I can say more than 250 times visited this location and it has nothing to do with weapons of mass destruction."
APTN
Washington DC - Septmber 30, 2002
Predator video showing an Iraqi two-missile battery swivelling in a circle and then firing on a coalition plane in the southern no-fly zone (July 2001)
London - November 8, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Tony Blair, British Prime Minister
"Saddam must now make his choice and my message to him is this, disarm or face force, there must be no more games, no more deceit, no more prevarication, obstruction or defiance."
POOL
Washington DC - November 8, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) George W Bush, US President
"The resolution approved today presents the Iraqi regime with a test - a final test."
Cutaway
SOUNDBITE (English) George W Bush, US President
"The outcome of the current crisis is determined - the full disarmament of weapons of mass destruction by Iraq will occur."
10:10:05
Pakistan
In January 2002 Wall Street journalist Daniel Pearl, was kidnapped while trying to interview the leader of a radical Muslim faction with purported links to the al Qaida network. A month later the US State Department announced his death in captivity after Pakistani authorities received a video containing footage of Pearl in captivity and his death. In July, four men, including British-born militant Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh, were convicted of the slaying.
Then, in June, an attacker crashed a bomb-laden vehicle into a guard post outside the US consulate in Karachi, killing himself and 11 other Pakistanis. A month later, Pakistani paramilitary commandos stormed residences in the city, arresting and charging three people with the bombing. Major General Salahuddin Satti, Director General of the Pakistan Rangers, said the trio were members of Islamic group Harkat-ul-Mujahedeen, also responsible for a suicide bombing at the city's Sheraton hotel in which 11 French engineers and three other people died.
In August there was yet another attack believed to be directed towards Western interests in Pakistan because of the government's involvement in the war against terror. Masked gunmen firing Kalashnikov rifles stormed the campus of a Christian school, killing six. Days later attackers hurled grenades at people leaving a church near a Christian hospital in Islamabad, killing three nurses. One of the attackers died in the assault.
APTN
New York - February 21, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Paul Steiger, Wall Street Journal Managing Editor
"We know believe that, based on reports from the US State Department and police officials in the Pakistani province of Sindh, that Danny Pearl was killed by his captors."
Karachi, Pakistan - February 21, 2002
Various of suspect Fahad Naseem taken from an armoured vehicle into the court, surrounded by heavy security
APTN
Karachi, Pakistan - June 14, 2002
Tilt down from US consulate with flag to car damaged after attack by suicide bomber
Low angle shot of road outside consulate showing bomb damage
Various of damaged car
Pan from debris in road to compound
APTN
Karachi, Pakistan - July 8, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Major General Salahuddin Satti, Director General of the Pakistan Rangers
"They wanted to damage the USA, its interests, and all the people, all the agencies which were supporting it or were friendly to it."
Various shots suspects Mohammad Hanif and Imran Rafiq at press conference
Various weapons found in raid on Karachi residences
APTN
Murree, Pakistan - August 5, 2002
Exterior of Murree Christian School, which was attacked by masked gunmen
Broken window
Bullet hole in window
Bloody sheet
Man adjusting sheets around a body
APTN
Islamabad, Pakistan - August 8, 2002
Various interiors of church showing debris and damage after attack, broken furniture, broken windows, glass on floor and benches
Shoes on ground
Dead body of attacker in mortuary
10:11:48
The Philippines
The United States sent troops to the Philippines for joint anti-terrorism exercises, designed to help the Philippines government fight its home-grown Islamic fundamentalist group, Abu Sayyaf. But there were violent clashes between police and protestors demonstrating against the US military presence. The exercises, on the southern Island of Mindanao, involved about 600 US troops. Abu Sayyaf separatists kidnapped and killed scores of Filipinos and many foreigners in the previous few years.
An American missionary couple, Gracia and Martin Burnham, was kidnapped on May 27 2001. In April 2002, the surrender of 18 Abu Sayyaf rebels raised hopes the Burnhams would be released unharmed. It followed another anti-terrorism success for the Philippines when an Indonesian man who allegedly planned a series of almost simultaneous bombings that killed 22 people in Manila in 2000 pleaded guilty to illegal possession of explosives. Fathur Al Ghozi is believed to be a key leader of the Jemaah Islamiyah, the Southeast Asian based group also believed to be behind the Bali nightclub bombings later in the year.
But, in June, more than a year after they had been kidnapped, Martin Burnham and a Filipino nurse also being held captive were killed in a shootout when US-trained commandos launched a rescue operation. Gracia was rescued. Four Abu Sayyaf members were killed and seven soldiers were wounded in the operation by Philippine commandos outfitted by the US with silencers, night vision equipment and high-tech headsets.
In August, Filipino troops raided a hideout of a kidnap gang on a US list of terrorists, rescuing two captives unharmed and killing one of the gang's leaders. President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo rushed to the scene of the raid in Magallanes town in the Cavite province, about 65 kilometers (40 miles) south of Manila, to show her commitment to her government's campaign against criminality and insurgency. Police identified the slain kidnapper as Faisal Marohombsar, a leader of the Pentagon gang, who escaped from the National Anti-Kidnapping Task Force's detention center in Manila last June 19. The gang's kidnap victims, four-year-old Patricia Chong and her nanny, managed to escape and were rescued unharmed.
APTN
Zamboanga File
Various of US soldiers arriving for joint anti-terrorism exercises with Philippine Army
Manila - January 23, 2002
Various of anti-US protest
Manila - January 31, 2002
Protestors clashing with riot police, hitting each other with sticks
Various of protestors shouting at riot police
Protestors charging police, protestors beaten back
APTN
Zamboanga, Philippines - April 17, 2002
Abu Sayyaf prisoners alighting from military truck
Wide shot group of Abu Sayyaf prisoners
Detainees walk past in a row
Abu Sayyaf prisoners getting onto truck
APTN
Manila - January 19, 2002
Fathur Rohman Al-Ghozi being escorted into news conference
Identity card
Close up Al Ghozi
APTN
Manila - December 30, 2000
Wide shot damaged light rail transit after explosion, with yellow "police line" barricade in foreground
Broken glass on the ground being cleared
APTN
Manila - June 7, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, Philippine President
"I am deeply saddened over the death of Ediborah Yap and Martin Burnham who were slain in an encounter with our troops and the Abu Sayyaf this afternoon after more than a year of captivity."
Philippines Government VNR
Philippines President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo standing in front of body of slain kidnapper Faisal Marohombsar
Various of dead man
Arroyo talking to government soldier wounded during the shootout
10:13:34
The Anthrax Scare
The anthrax scare in the United States was not over either. In May, the U-S Federal Reserve reported about 20 pieces of mail tested positive for traces of anthrax in an initial screening. The tainted mail was discovered as part of routine mail testing by the Federal Reserve in a mobile trailer stationed in a courtyard at the Federal Reserve's main buildings in downtown Washington. Fed spokesman David Skidmore said some of the mail was addressed to Chairman Alan Greenspan as well as other officials.
Five people died and 13 others were sickened in autumn 2001 when anthrax-laden letters were mailed to NBC news anchor Tom Brokaw, the New York Post and the Washington, D.C., offices of Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle and Senator Patrick Leahy. A year later, the FBI had yet to name a suspect.
APTN
Washington DC - May 7, 2002
Exterior view of Federal Reserve
APTN
File
Close up slide of anthrax bacteria
Close up film of antrax
Workers sorting mail
10:14:05
Various (Richard Reid/The Pipe-bomber/ Moussaoui /Lindh/Lockerbie)
In January, US authorities declared a further victory in the war against terrorism when shoebomber Richard Reid was indicted on eight charges. The British-born man was alleged to have tried to blow up an American Airlines flight using a bomb concealed in his shoes.
Authorities also caught up with Luke Helder, suspected of planting bombs in mailboxes across the United States. The FBI says Helder placed 18 bombs in mailboxes in five states along with anti-government messages. Six people were injured in the attacks. 21-year-old Helder had six bombs with him when he was arrested. Federal government officials described the crimes as 'acts of domestic terrorism.'
From the point of view of the US authorities, one of the greatest successes in the post-September 11 anti-terrorism drive was the arrest of Zacarias Moussaoui. Moussaoui was the first person to be charged as an accomplice in the September 11 attacks. He had taken flying lessons in the United States but his family protested his innocence.
The Bush administration also announced it would charge the American man who fought with the Taliban, John Walker Lindh, with conspiracy to kill US citizens in Afghanistan. Lindh told prosecutors that he joined a terrorist training camp in Afghanistan last May and spent seven months there. Osama bin Laden visited the camp several times and on one occasion allegedly met Lindh. Lindh was taken into custody in December 2001 by US forces after a prison uprising in a fortress in the northern Afghan city of Mazar-e-Sharif.
Meanwhile in a Scottish court in the Netherlands Libyan intelligence agent Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi failed in his appeal against his conviction for the Lockerbie bombing. All 259 people on board Pan Am flight 103, as well as 11 people on the ground, were killed when the jet blew up in the skies over the town of Lockerbie.
POOL
Washington DC - January 16, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) John Ashcroft, US Attorney General
"This morning a Federal Grand Jury in Massachusetts returned a nine count indictment against Richard Colvin Reid. Reid is charged as an Al Qaida trained terrorist who attempted to destroy American Airlines Flight 63 with explosive devices concealed in his shoes."
APTN
Boston, Massachusetts
Slow-motion close of shoebomber Richard Reid in custody
APTN
Boston, Massachusetts - January 28, 2002
Various court sketches of Richard Reid and judge in court
POOL
Reno - May, 10, 2002
Pipe-bomber suspect Luke John Helder walks out and gets into bomb
APTN
Washington DC - January 15, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) John Ashcroft, US Attorney General
"Today I'm announcing the filing of charges against John Walker Lindh, an American citizen, who was captured in Afghanistan, fighting for the Taliban."
File - Afghanistan - December 2001
John Walker Lindh sitting with other Taliban after his capture
10:15:13
Peru Bomb
A car bomb exploded outside the U.S. Embassy in the Peruvian capital Lima just days before US President George W Bush was due in the city for meetings with his Peruvian counterpart.
Nine people were killed in the bombing and tens injured. The blast occurred at about 10:45 p.m. (0345 GMT Thursday), in front of an upscale shopping centre, in an area with popular late-night restaurants and cinemas.
APTN
Lima March 21, 2002
Building damaged by car bomb which exploded outside the US embassy
Windscreen of car shattered by bomb, pan to body covered with plastic on the street
Crowd of people in front of bank building
Police walking in debris following the explosion
10:15:40
Spain Bombs
Basque separatist group ETA continued its campaign of terror in Spain. In June there were five explosions in two days, timed to coincide with the Seville EU summit. A British man was critically wounded and five others injured in one of the explosions, in Fuengirola, 150 kilometres (90 miles) southeast of Seville.
APTN
Fuengirola - June 22, 2002
Fire officer putting out fire after bomb
Smoke and burnt vehicles
Police gathered next to fire engine
Burnt out vehicle
10:16:11
Greece Bombs
In Greece, authorities said they were close to dismantling the November 17 terrorist group, which eluded Greek, American and British authorities since 1975, when it first emerged with the killing of the CIA station chief in Athens, Richard Welch. The anti-American group has used guns, bombs and anti-tank rockets to carry out 23 killings - including those of four US military officials, two Turkish diplomats and Greek businessmen and politicians. In July 2002 prosecutors in Athens charged two suspected November 17 terrorists over a series of robberies and killings, including those of American and British military officials. At the same time, an investigating magistrate arraigned the first three November 17 suspects arrested after a police sweep began three weeks ago. They were jailed pending trial, but no court date was set. Those in custody included an alleged leader of the extreme left-wing November 17 group, which carried out bombings, assassinations and robberies with impunity for 27 years.
APTN
Athens - July 21, 2002
November 17 (Greek terrorist group) suspect Christodoulos Xiros (large man in grey t-shirt) is walked into court
Xiros, followed by his brother Vassilis Xiros (long hair), and Dionissis Georgiadis (black t-shirt)
Police officer
Suspects Iraklis Kostaris (grey t-shirt) and Costas Karatsolis are lead into court
APTN
Athens - July 10, 2002
'November 17' flag
various guns and grenades found by police
10:17:02
Bin Laden Video and Fax
Over a year after the September 11 attacks, the man widely thought to be behind them continued to elude US authorities. In September Arab satellite channel Al Jazeera broadcast new footage of the alleged leader of Al Qaida, Osama bin Laden, saying the US should brace itself for further attacks. And in October a fax purportedly from bin Laden was shown on the channel. The writer praised the attack on a French oil tanker on October 6. APTN could not independently authenticate the signature on the fax, nor confirm that the sender was indeed the world's most wanted fugitive.
APTN
Date and location unknown
File of Osama Bin Laden warning US of further attacks (Arabic with English subtitles)
Bin Laden praising September 11 hijackers (audio overlaid with stills)
Al Qaida training camp in Afghanistan (English commentary)
Reconstruction of hijackers studying maps of September 11 targets (English commentary)
APTN
October 14, 2002
Wide shot showing all six pages of fax
Pan across text - highlighted in yellow - stating as follows: "We congratulate the Islamic community for the heroic operations which our holy warriors carried out in Yemen against the oil tanker and in Kuwait against the American forces. By blowing up this tanker in Yemen, they cut the pipeline that supplies oil to the crusaders of the West, in order to remind the enemy of the heavy price they will pay in blood if they continue their crusade against our community and steal our resources. The heroic operation in Kuwait also showed the danger that American forces will face wherever they are based in Islamic countries."
Signature (highlighted in yellow) at end of document, purporting to be that of Bin Laden
Pan from previously-published signature (in green) across to signature (yellow) in this document
Afghanistan
10:19:07
The Continuing Fight
At the beginning of the year, allied troops continued to rout out Al Qaida and Taliban fighters in Afghanistan.
In March, allied troops took the Shah-e-Kot valley, south of Gardez. After a withering aerial barrage, they prowled the rugged mountain area to hunt out any entrenched enemy troops.
In former Taliban strongholds, pro-Taliban fighters still resisted allied troops. In Kandahar in January four suspected former Taliban fighters were captured after an hour-long gun battle in the city centre. Later that month an eight-week stand-off in Kandahar Hospital ended when allied troops blasted their way into a hospital ward and killed six al Qaida fighters who had been holed up there, refusing to surrender.
In the Gardez region, in eastern Afghanistan, heavy fighting highlighted the fragility of Afghanistan's new-found peace. The battle pitted troops loyal to Bacha Khan - a warlord aligned to Afghanistan's interim administration and working with US special forces - against troops for the local government council. The fighting broke out after the locals opposed Khan's taking of the provincial governorship. The support for Al Qaida in the area posed a real problem for allied troops as it became clear locals here were still supporting enemy troops entrenched in the surrounding mountains. Local officials even took to handing out fake money to the citizens of Gardez as a representation of the reward they would receive if they handed over Al Qaida fighters.
In Kabul, the highest figures of authority were not immune to the continuing violence. In February the minister of civil aviation was attacked and killed at Kabul airport. At first it was thought those responsible were angry pilgrims, whose journey to Mecca had been delayed. But days later the interim president Hamid Karzai announced Abdul Rahman's death was linked to a blood feud dating back to the struggle against the Taliban. Five men were wanted in connection with the killing. Two were generals and others were members of the justice ministry and the intelligence service.
In July the new administration was targeted again, this time with the assassination of Vice President Abdul Qadir. The attack took place as Al Qadir was being driven through the capital. Two gunmen fired Kalashnikovs at the car, killing Qadir and his driver.
Then in September, in the bloodiest attack in the capital since the fall of the Taliban, a powerful car bomb rocked a busy market area near the Ministry of Information. At least 22 people were killed. On the same day, in Kandahar, there was a failed assassination attempt against President Karzai. His US bodyguards wrestled to the ground and shot dead the uniformed gunman.
APTN
Shah-e-Kot, South of Gardez - March 13, 2002
Northern Alliance soldiers flying over battle area
Commander looking through binoculars
Various fighters observing fighting area with AK-47 and rocket launchers
APTN
Kandahar January 3, 2002
Anti-Taliban soldier walking with gun
Anti-Taliban soldier pointing gun
Various pro-Taliban being led away
Man being lead away
APTN
Kandahar - January 8, 2002
Close up mortar aimed at window where other Al Qaida members are barricaded in hospital
APTN
Kandahar - January 28, 2002
Various of hospital AUDIO gunshots
Various of dead fighters inside the hospital
APTN
Gardez - January 31, 2002
Wide shot of smoke rising from mountains - AUDIO gunfire and explosions
Men on truck with gun secured to back
APTN
Gardez - February 8, 2002
Soldier speaking into radio
Long shot of soldier manning gun position
APTN
Gardez - March 3, 2002
US warplanes flying over Gardez
APTN
Gardez - March 6, 2002
Close up coalition Afghan fighter standing with weapon behind back
Men standing on building throwing paper money to the crowd
Various close ups of money
Soldier aiming mortar
Hillside cave being mortared
Tilt from gun to soldier
Soldier firing mortar
Troops on ground, pan to explosion on mountainside
APTN
Shah-e-Kot - March 14, 2002
Soldiers looking at B52 planes
Road between Gardez and Kabul - March 14, 2002
Wide shot tanks driving through mountains
POOL
Bagram - April 6, 2002
Captain Lou Bauer pointing to diagram of cave complex
APTN
Kabul - 15 February 2002
Various shots of pilgrims at Kabul airport
APTN
Kabul - January 2002
Afghan Aviation Minister Abdul Rahman congratulating the crew of the first commercial flight
APTN
Kabul - July 6, 2002
Soldier standing next to wrecked vehicle
Various of front of wrecked vehicle with bullet holes in the windscreen
Various interior of vehicle
Side of wrecked vehicle against wall
APTN
Jalalalabad - April 11, 2002
Haji Abdul Qadir, Afghan Vice President who was assassinated
APTN
Kabul - September 5, 2002
Overturned car amid wreckage following blast in market which killed at least 22
Men beside fire engine pouring water near burnt out yellow car
Injured in hospital room
Police and soldiers near overturned cars
10:22:16
Prisoners
Allied troops in Afghanistan faced the difficulty of looking after and punishing the enemy troops captured over the past year.
Detainees in Sheberghan prison, the largest Taliban detention facility in Afghanistan, endured a grim reality. The cells were damp, wet underfoot and freezing cold. The US army identified every prisoner using DNA and photographs. In March several hundred prisoners were freed after spending five months in Sheberghan The US said they were young men recruited by the Al Qaida network, but who had never actually taken part in fighting.
The worst offenders were sent to the US Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba. The camp, which became known as 'Camp X-ray', was of growing concern to human rights groups. Inmates, dressed in bright orange jump suits and knitted caps, were kept in open cages and interrogated for long periods of time. They were not allowed access to their families or lawyers. But officials who visited the camp said they were in good health and able to talk freely and openly.
APTN
Sheberghan - January 19, 2002
Close up prisoners peering out of prison doors
Prisoners staring out from behind prison bars
Prisoners' footwear
Prisoners standing in pools of water in cells
APTN
Sheberghan - March 22, 2002
Prisoners looking through bars and barbed wire
APTN
Guantanamo, Cuba - January 16, 2002
Watch tower
US Defense Department
Guantanamo, Cuba - January 19, 2002
Various stills of Al Qaida prisoners at Camp X-ray
APTN
Guantanamo, Cuba - January 26, 2002
Wide of US soldiers in formation
APTN
Guantanamo, Cuba - February 10, 2002
Guard Tower
Prisoner being taken to interrogation room
10:23:12
War on Heroin Growers
The new Afghan administration was keen to prove to the world that it was taking action against the country's notorious heroin trade. Following the fall of the anti-drugs Taliban, tens of thousands of farmers rushed to start growing poppies again. Afghanistan regained its title as the world's biggest opium producer. When Karzai took office, he was quick to introduce a poppy ban, and moved to crack down on violators.
POOL
Kandahar - February 15, 2002
Various of Kandahar police standing with pile of confiscated drugs
Close up heroin
Police setting fire to the pile of drugs
APTN
Outside Jalalalabad, Nangrahar Province, Afghanistan - April 11, 2002
Various of crops being destroyed, including soldiers using rocket-propelled grenade to knock heads off poppies
10:23:39
Refugees and hunger
A combination of the years of Taliban control and a devastating drought left many people in remote areas on the brink of starvation. In the Hindu Kush area, thousands of people were found living on grassy roots and plants to survive. Abdul Ghias was one of those who had nothing with which to feed his family before aid arrived in the villages further down the mountain. He was able to fetch a sack of wheat for his family. But other more remote villages remained out of the reach of aid.
Those displaced by the years of war faced a long struggle to rebuild their lives. Despite the new administration and a fragile peace, for many life continued as before, inhabiting sprawling refugee camps, their homes destroyed.
APTN
Bonavash, Balkh Province - January 6, 2002
Man on donkey moving slowly along barren hillside
Cracked barren ground
Woman pours food into large bowl and stirs
Woman holding up the shirt of small child to show swollen stomach
APTN
Zari, Balkh Province - January 6, 2002
Abdul Ghias taking grassy clovers and eating them
Zari, Balkh Province - January 7, 2002
Abdul Ghias taking sack of food from free wheat distribution
APTN
Tasadi Refugee Camp - January 27, 2002
Various wide shots of the camp
Close up little girl
APTN
Siakhak village - January 19, 2002
Wide of aid truck passing through crowd
Villager carrying sack of wheat
Donkey with wheat on its back
Donkeys walking across snowy field
10:24:50
Disasters
Natural disaster also plagued Afghanistan, with its vulnerable geology.
In March, a massive earthquake hit the north of the country, and north-western Pakistan, killing hundreds of people and destroying homes. Road access was lost to the remote area, difficult to navigate in normal circumstances.
In February, an avalanche near the newly-reopened Salang tunnel connecting north and south Afghanistan killed five motorists. Rescuers managed to save hundreds of others trapped in the tunnel.
APTN
Nahrin - March 27, 2002
Mid shot aerial of damaged houses after earthquake
Various of land and trees moving during aftershock
People walking over destroyed buildings
Two men praying next to grave
APTN
Near Salang - February 7, 2002
Various of snow on mountain after avalanche in the region
Man walking up mountain taking water to his family
APTN
Near Salang - February
Various cars and trucks unable to get through the tunnel following the avalanche
Various of rescue vehicles
10:25:52
Return to democracy
In January, US President George W Bush received interim Afghan leader Hamid Karzai in the White House. Although Bush ruled out participating in a multinational peace-keeping force in Afghanistan, the two leaders did stress the partnership between the US and Afghanistan in fighting terrorism. It was a meeting which consolidated Afghanistan's progress to democracy. In February a ceremony was held to introduce the country's new national flag. The new red, green and black flag drew comparisons to that which was flown during the reign of exiled King Zaher Shah.
But, in many ways, the country has a long way to go before becoming a stable democracy. Economically, the fragility of the local currency was highlighted when rumours of dollarisation caused its value to drop 25 percent in a day. In September Karzai announced the introduction of new 500 and 1000 afghani (Afghan currency) banknotes in a bid to boost growth and make transactions easier. Before, even small purchases in Afghanistan required the buyer to carry large bundles of notes.
Meanwhile, Afghanistan's last monarch returned to the country. King Shah spent 29 years in exile. Many Afghans hoped his return would help bring peace and prosperity. One of the reasons for his return was to preside over the grand council of tribal leaders and other Afghan representatives, or loya jirga, which took place in June.
APTN
Washington DC - January 28, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Hamid Karzai, Interim leader of Afghanistan
"The war will go on against terrorism until we are sure that they are finished completely. Until we are sure that they are finished as an organisation, until we are sure they are finished as people hiding in caves and in the mountains, until we make sure the menace is gone."
POOL
Washington DC - January 28, 2002
Karzai listening to President George W Bush in the White House's Rose Garden
APTN
Kabul - February 5, 2002
Variuos of interim leader Hamid Karzai walking in procession ahead of ceremony to raise new Afghan flag at the presidential palace
Various of flag being raised
Long shot of new flag
APTN
Kabul - January 30, 2002
Money changing market packed with street traders
Bundles of afghanis - national currency
APTN
Kabul - September 4, 2002
Close up specimen of new 500 afghani banknote, then 1000 afghani note
APTN
Kabul - April 18, 2002
Banner of the king to welcome King Shah back to Afghanistan
Various King Zaher Shah and Hamid Karzai walking past the camera
Zaher Shah praying at tomb
APTN
Kabul - August 4, 2002
Karzai walking through the palace gardens with King Shah
10:27:26
Return to civilization
The new Afghan authorities, to a greater extent in the capital Kabul, gradually reversed social changes that had been imposed by the Taliban. Schools that had been closed reopened. Girls, who had been banned from study beyond the age of eight, returned to the classrooms. The United Nations helped launch special catch-up classes for girls who had missed education under the Taliban.
And the Kabul Weekly, post-Taliban Afghanistan's first independent newspaper, was launched. The editor said the newspaper would test the government's commitment to media freedom and help lead the country towards democracy.
Women were also able to enjoy simple freedoms that had been banned under the Taliban; going to a beauty salon, buying pictures of their favourite film stars, and not wearing a burqa. Confirming this new-found freedom was the release this year of 'Roz', a new women's magazine, funded by the French magazine, Elle.
Kabul's National Theatre also reopened for entertainment after being closed for six years under the Taliban. Damage that the building sustained during heavy fighting in 1992 was still visible but it didn't stop the audience enjoying the performance.
Music too, was heard again in Kabuls streets. At the Pamir Hotel in the heart of Kandahar, a former Taliban stronghold, dozens of men quickly took up the custom of going every night to share their appreciation of music.
And more modern forms of entertainment also quickly found their way into post-Taliban society. Video arcades for games junkies and film hire outlets also sprung up across the country.
APTN
Herat - January 10, 2002
Close up entrance to girl's school gates
Various young women with faces revealed talking to each other outside school
SOUNDBITE (Dari) Zahra, School Student
"From today we can go to school again. Once again we are free to further our knowledge and education and we are very happy about this."
APTN
Kabul March 23, 2002
SOUNDBITE (Dari) Hamid Karzai, Afghan leader
(breaking into tears) "The children at this school are the future of Afghanistan."
APTN
Kabul - January 27, 2002
Various close ups of the Kabul Weekly
Sign outside the offices of Kabul Weekly
Journalist reading the Kabul Weekly
Close up Kabul Weekly
APTN
Various shots of first edition of women's magazine 'Roz' coming off printing press
Various close-ups of magazine's front page
Various pages of the magazine
APTN
Kabul January 8, 2002
Exterior National Theatre building showing damage suffered during fighting in 1992
Destroyed roof
Audience sitting in open-air theatre
Performance on stage
APTN
Kandahar - January 21, 2002
Musicians playing together in the Pamir Hotel
Various of musicians
APTN
Kandahar - January 22, 2002
Entrance to video arcade
Video store
Man looking at DVDs
Close up DVDs
Video stall
The Middle East
10:29:43
Suicide bombs
In 2002, there was no let up in the deadly suicide attacks against Israelis, despite the Israeli offensive against the Palestinians greatly restricting their movement and increasing security around Palestinian-controlled areas.
On January 27, for the first time, a female suicide bomber struck. 28 year old Wafa Idris killed herself and an 81 year old Israeli man when she detonated the explosives she was carrying in a busy shopping street in Jerusalem. Her mother said Wafa had been shot three times by rubber bullets while working as a paramedic for the Red Crescent in Ramallah.
On June 18 there were devastating scenes when a suicide bomber killed himself and 19 civilians in a bomb attack on a bus in southern Jerusalem.
On March 27, in the Israeli resort of Netanya, a bomber blew himself up at a hotel, killing 28 Israelis celebrating Passover. The attack claimed by militant group Hamas, was the deadliest since the beginning of the uprising.
On March 9 at least 11 people were killed and 50 injured in a suicide bomb attack on a crowded cafe in west Jerusalem, near the official residence of then Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
And on May 7 a suicide bomber attacked a social club in the Israeli town of Rishon Letzion, killing 16 people and injuring more than 50.
APTN
Jerusalem - January 27, 2002
Scene of attack after first female suicide bomber hit
Debris from blast
Woman holding injured woman
Police at scene
APTN
Ramallah - January 30, 2002
SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Safia Idris, Mother of female suicide bomber Wafa Idris
"She left on Sunday. I had no idea of what she was doing or where she was going, she didn't tell me anything."
APTN
Jerusalem - June 18, 2002
Zoom into damaged bus and soldiers after suicide bomb which killed 19 people
Bodies on ground covered with black plastic, pan to bus
Wide of damaged bus
Body bags beside road, pan to bus
Israeli Arab girl injured in blast
Various shots of fax in Arabic from militant group Hamas claiming responsibility for suicide bombing
APTN
Al-Faraa Refugee Camp, near Nablus, West Bank - June 18, 2002
Naima Al-Ghoul, mother of bomber Mohammed Al-Ghoul, seated with women mourners
Close up photograph of attacker, tilt up to Naima weeping
APTN
Netanya - March 27, 2002
Exterior damaged hotel after suicide bomber blew himself up in the dining room killing 19
Various destruction inside hotel
Various pans of scene outside hotel with police and bodies on ground
APTN
Jerusalem - March 9, 2002
Body bags in street outside café where suicide bomber blew himself up (opposite prime minister's residence), killing 11
Investigators at entrance to café
Various exteriors of café
Various of café interiors seen through broken windows
APTN
Rishon Letzion - May 8, 2002
Wide of scene of bomb attack outside social club where 16 people were killed
Various bombed building and investigators sifting through debris
10:31:53
Israeli attacks on Palestinian headquarters
With no end in sight to the cycle of violence in the Middle East, the Israelis sought to consolidate their position and force the Palestinian administration to prevent more suicide attacks. On January 18, the Israelis sent more than 20 tanks to surround Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's headquarters in Ramallah. Overnight the pressure was turned up, when Israeli tanks and armoured personnel carriers sealed off Arafat's Ramallah headquarters and destroyed a Palestinian Broadcasting Corporation building. The siege came after Arafat had already been confined to Ramallah for several weeks by the Israeli authorities. Now he was confined to his office. On the 20th of February Israeli helicopters fired on Arafat's office for the first time, causing massive destruction.
Arafat was not released from his confinement until May. The Israeli Defence Force had destroyed all of Ramallah's infrastructure - and its bureacracy, schools and security services. The Israelis would return to put Arafat under siege several times later in the year, although never for such an extended period.
APTN
Ramallah, West Bank - January 18, 2002
Tank blocking road near Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat's headquarters
Tanks parked
APTN
Ramallah - January 19, 2002
APC drives into carpark in front of the Palestinian Broadcasting Centre
Explosion, lights go out
Wide of PBC building in flames
Wide PBC building entrance
Various interiors of damage
Various of tanks surrounding Arafat's office
APTN
Ramallah - February 20, 2002
Missiles hitting Arafat's office
Various interior shots (with blood on the ground) inside Arafat's residence
Various firefighters dousing flames outside Arafat's residence
APTN
Ramallah - February 21, 2002
SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Yasser Arafat, Palestinian leader
"This is an attempt to nail down the Palestinian people and its leadership. They don't know that we as a people are undefeated and this leadership is part of the undefeated people."
10:33:24
Operation Defensive Shield
Israeli forces also attacked Palestinian areas they said were breeding ground for suicide attackers. Operation Defensive Shield was the largest military operation in the West Bank since 1967, launched in response to the Passover suicide attack in Netanya, when 28 people were killed. Nablus and Jenin were the two places highest on the Israeli blacklist. In Nablus, the West Bank's largest city, Israeli forces battled with Palestinian gunmen. The fighting meant many of the injured, and those killed, could not be evacuated and human rights organisations complained of lack of access to parts of the city. Jenin camp too was out of bounds to human rights organisations while Israeli tanks moved in, destroyed homes and launched fierce fighting to rout out terrorists. Journalists were only able to enter the camp six weeks after the Israelis attacked. They found the once lively streets were silent and that many of the camp's people had fled during the fighting. Israel estimated 100 Palestinians were killed in the camp during eight days of the deadliest fighting. Palestinians said the toll was far higher and that many people were also starved, or cut off from their water supplies. Israel lost 23 soldiers in the Jenin operation. After the Israelis left, the Palestinians struggled to come to terms with the extent of the devastation. Hardly a building remained untouched and the streets were piled high with rubble.
APTN
Nablus - April 7, 2002
Wide shot of Nablus, with AUDIO gunfire
Various of gunmen firing on Israeli position from behind the wall
Body of gunman
Gunmen firing
Injured man being dragged to safety
Injured man being carried on stretcher
APTN
Jenin - March 1, 2002
Wide of Jenin refugee camp with minaret and AUDIO call to prayer and explosions from the battle
APTN
Jenin - April 13, 2002
Destroyed street in Jenin
Woman carrying bottle
Women entering home which has been half destroyed
Street littered with debris from buildings
Old man looking through window
Buildings with bullet and shell holes, destroyed homes
Charred body
Women salvaging possessions
APTN
Jenin - April 16, 2002
Woman drinking from tap in the rubble
Sewage water in rubble, pan to women sitting and talking in demolished house
Old woman sitting on doorstep of destroyed house
Various of people searching through rubble
Woman standing on first floor of destroyed house with her children
Pan of destroyed houses
10:35:27
The Battle of Manger Square
After running battles with Israeli troops, about 200 Palestinian gunmen forced their way into the Church of the Nativity - believed to be the birthplace of Jesus Christ - in Bethlehem's Manger Square. Israeli tanks positioned themselves on the square and soldiers occupied buildings overlooking the church. Thus began the siege of Bethlehem that lasted five weeks. Those inside the church with the gunmen included human rights activists, journalists and members of the church's clergy.
During the siege, while intense negotiations took place, some of those holed up inside, and the bodies of those killed in gunbattles with the Israelis, were able to leave. Israeli soldiers threw smoke bombs between those leaving and journalists, blocking the view.
A European-brokered deal ended the siege. As part of the deal, 13 of the group- those highest on Israel's wanted list- were deported, first to Cyprus and then to other European countries. Another 26 militiamen were transported to the Gaza Strip, where they were to remain, exiled from the West Bank.
APTN
Bethlehem - April 2, 2002
Various of Bethlehem, AUDIO gunfire
APTN
Bethlehem - April 3, 2002
(telephone interview over still of Church of the Nativity)
SOUNDBITE (English) Marc Innaro, Correspondent of Radiotelevisione Italia (RAI)
"The situation in and around the Nativity Church in the heart of Bethlehem is still unchanged. There are inside more or less 200 Palestinian gunmen from all the Palestinian factions, Hamas, Jihad, the Al Aqsa Brigade and so on."
APTN
Bethlehem - April 2, 2002
Tank driving towards camera, drives over car in street
APTN
Bethlehem - April 8, 2002
Various early morning shots of Manger Square, smoke rising with AUDIO heavy gunfire
Israeli soldiers searching firefighters (before allowing them to attend to fire)
Various water hosing down fire, AUDIO gunfire
Various shots scene with smoke
APTN
Bethlehem - April 25, 2002
Wide shot Manger Square with tank in front
Blindfolded prisoners leaving church
Israeli soldiers checking coffins
APTN
Bethlehem May 4, 2002
Israeli soldier standing guard
Church bells ringing, zoom out to church
Pakistan/India/Kashmir
10:37:19
Build up of troops
There was no let up in the tensions between Pakistan and India over Kashmir. Pakistan denied Indian allegations that it supported anti-India militant groups operating in Kashmir and India.
The two countries came close to their third war in January after an attack the previous month on the Indian parliament. Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf launched a crackdown on militants, closing the border between Pakistan and Kashmir.
Both countries amassed troops along the Kashmiri line of control. In May again, intense international diplomatic efforts were needed to avert a war. India stepped up pressure on Pakistan following a raid on an Indian army camp. India fired its guns across the border, triggering an exchange of fire.
A security summit in Almaty, Kazakhstan was the setting for more diplomatic efforts to get the two leaders off a war footing. While their troops fired at each other in Kashmir, Musharraf and Indian Prime Minister Bihari Vajpayee, sat at the same table, exchanged angry statements blaming each other.
The Almaty meeting came just a week after Pakistan launched missile tests in an undisclosed location. The missile was a locally-made medium range surface-to-surface ballistic missile called the Ghauri, capable of carrying both a conventional and nuclear warhead. The tests further angered India.
APTN
Jammu, (near border with India) - January 13, 2002
Indian soldiers passing sign saying 'Kashmir, paradise on earth'
APTN
Wagah, Pakistan - December 31, 2002
Pakistani border guard performing ceremony to close border with people watching in the background
Pakistani and Indian guards performing ceremony
Indian (on left of picture) and Pakistani flags lowered
APTN
Almaty, Kazakhstan - June 3, 2002
Indian Prime Minister Bihari Vajpayee at street naming ceremony
Vajpayee and Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev at ceremony
Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf walking off plane
APTN
Athmkam, on Pakistani side of Line of Control - May 27, 2002
Wide of Pakistani commander giving briefing
Briefing board
APTN
Athmkam, on Pakistani side of Line of Control - January 2, 2002
Pakistani soldiers overlooking river valley marking line of control
Gun pointing out of bunker
Soldier in bunker
APTN
Samba sector, Jammu-Kashmir - January 2, 2002
Indian soldiers camouflaging mortar position
APTN
Ranbir Singh Pura Sector, on Indian side of Line of Control - January 8, 2002
Indian soldiers standing inside bunker
Close up Indian soldier's face
APTN
Near Nursarhy village, on Pakistani side of Line of Control - January 16, 2002
Various Pakistani troops on patrol near Line of Control
Various Pakistani troops on guard with machine guns looking into Indian village of Tethwal, across the Line of Control
Pakistani Army Video
Undisclosed location, Pakistan - May 25, 2002
Test missile blasts off
10:39:08
Kashmir
Violence was ever present on the streets of Kashmir as separatists fought their own war against the Indian authorities. Civilians were often caught in the crossfire. A crackdown on the separatists by the unpopular Indian authorities often only served to increase tensions with the majority Muslim population.
Supporters of separatist leader Yasin Malik resisted his arrest in Srinagar, the Kashmiri capital, by Indian police. Scuffles ensued between the stone-throwing supporters and police wielding tear gas. Malik's arrest came a day after police caught a woman carrying 100 thousand US dollars in cash allegedly intended for him. After his arrest, Malik was hospitalised to undergo treatment for a heart ailment. More protests were sparked when activists from the Hindu nationalist group Shiv Sena allegedly barged into the hospital.
In May, three masked men shot dead separatist leader Abdul Ghani Lone as he sat on a platform at a memorial rally in Srinagar. Lone was one of the leaders of the All Party Huriyat Conference, a legal group which advocated Kashmir's separation from India. He was considered a moderate and as such had been threatened by both Hindu nationalists and Islamic militants.
Violence surged ahead of elections in the troubled province. Independence groups called for a boycott of the vote, which they said would be rigged in favour of the state's pro-India ruling party.
Indian Law Minister Mushtaq Ahmad Lone was killed in September by suspected Islamic rebels.
As the elections approached the violence increased. At the end of September suspected Islamic militants blew up a vehicle carrying election candidate Khaleda Mushtaq, killing her father, two supporters and one police escort. More than 120 political activists and candidates were killed in two months leading up to the elections.
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - March 25, 2002
Policeman tells separatist leader (leader of group Jammu-Kashmir Liberation Front, JKLF) Yasin Malik he is being arrested at briefing given by Malik
Scuffles between police and Malik's supporters
Malik being led out of building, surrounded by supporters shouting 'We want freedom'
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - March 26, 2002
Yasin Malik's supporters chanting slogans, burning tyres
Protestors pelting stones at security, tear gas shells explode amongst them on the street
Security forces running towards protestors
Protestors pelting stones
Policeman throwing stone back at protestors
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - May 9, 2002
JKLF leader Javed Mir and other protestors chanting slogans in support of Yasin Malik (after hospital invasion)
Demonstration being stopped by security forces
Police firing tear gas shells
Protestors pelting policemen with stones
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - May 21, 2002
Wide shot bodies of separatist Kashmiri leader Abdul Ghani Lone and his bodyguard
Various mourning relatives
Close up body
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - 1996 FILE
Various file of separatist Kashmiri leader Abdul Ghani Lone
APTN
Sogam, Kashmir - September 12, 2002
Body of Mushtaq Ahmad Lone
Wide of body
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - September 28, 2002
Close up injured candidate Khaleda Mushtaq
APTN
Pahloo Pulgam, outside of Srinaga - September 28, 2002
Close up damaged car
Photograph of injured candidate Mushtaq
APTN
Jammu - September 24, 2002
Security outside polling station for Kashmir elections
Voters marked with indelible ink
Man casts vote
APTN
Srinagar, Kashmir - September 20, 2002
Protestors shouting 'Pakistan' at march against state legislative elections in Kashmir
Tracking shot security force members running through street, firing tear gas at fleeing protestors
Various security force members firing tear gas at protestors
APTN
Kupwara District - March 17, 2002
Wide shot dead suspected Islamic militants, surrounded by Indian security forces who killed 10 of them
Arms and ammunition recovered from militants on display
10:41:22
Ayodhya
The Indian town of Ayodhya, in the state of Uttar Pradesh, became the focus of tensions between Hindu nationalists and Muslims. The Hindus remained intent on building a temple in the town, near the site of a 16th century mosque destroyed by rioters in 1992. Thousands of Hindus visited the city as the campaign mounted. They rejected court orders saying they were not to build the temple, saying they would go ahead anyway. In the communal strife that followed, hundreds were killed.
APTN
Ayodhya, India - February 25, 2002
City of Ayodhya
APTN
Delhi, India - February 26, 2002
Replica of Ayodhya temple intended to be built
APTN
Ayodhya, India - February 26, 2002
Women offering flower to sacred Saryu river during morning prayer
Hindu pilgrims praying at river
APTN
Ayodhya, India - March 15, 2002
Hindu procession with World Hindu Council leader Ramchandra Das Paramhans
Das with consecrated pillar the Hindus want to use in the temple
APTN
Ayodhya, India - February 17, 2002
Close up flower garland
Wide of prayer meeting near temple pillars
Hindu priest making offering
APTN
Ayodhya, India - March 1, 2002
Various of Ayodhya train station as Hindus leave because of violence in town
Hindu pilgrims waiting for train, chanting 'We will be back on March 15 to build the temple'
10:42:19
Gujarat riots and religious killing
Religious tensions also ran high in the state of Gujarat where religious rioting claimed thousands of lives, most of them Muslim. The riots were sparked when a Muslim mob burned a train carrying Hindu nationalists. Then, Hindus went on a killing rampage, burning down Muslim homes and businesses. The police and army were accused of standing by, watching Muslims, including women and children, be burnt alive. The city of Ahmadabad saw some of the worst violence.
APTN
Gujarat State - March 2, 2002
Armed police telling people in Hindi area to get inside or they will be shot
Crowd running (crowd had been watching people trying to salvage their possessions from burning buildings)
Policemen with stick chasing two men
APTN
Ahmadabad, Gujarat - April 26, 2002
Policeman shouting for tear gas to be fired
Policemen firing gas shells
Flaming torch thrown at building by rioter
Building on fire
Police squad firing tear gas
APTN
Kalupur, South of Ahmadabad, Gujarat - April 29, 2002
Flames rising from burning building, petrol bombs hurled through air
Police firing
Burning building
APTN
Ahmadabad, Gujarat - April 30, 2002
Various shots police leading away arrested men, said to have been part of a group which attacked a house with homemade firebombs
APTN
Ahmadabad, Gujarat - March 2, 2002
Young Muslim girl being treated for burns
Girl covered in bandages
APTN
Ahmadabad, Gujarat - March 1, 2002
Various crowd looking at smouldering human remains
Close up name badge lying on ground
Various of Gurbarg residential society - burnt cars and bicycles lying around
Various large fire-damaged building
Dead body covered with cloak lies in road
Burnt shops
Remains of burnt cars and bicycles
APTN
Ahmadabad, Gujarat - March 23, 2002
Various riot damage
Various police standing behind grill
Other Asian News
10:44:20
East Timor
The world's newest country, East Timor, continued on the path of democracy.
In January East Timor launched a truth and reconciliation commission to heal deep rifts in society and promote national unity. The commission focused on atrocities committed between 1974, when Portuguese colonial rule collapsed and 1999, when Indonesia finally pulled out following a UN-sponsored plebiscite. Interim foreign minister and nobel peace prize winner Jose Ramos Horta opened the commission.
Meanwhile in the Indonesian capital, Jakarta, seven senior officials were charged with genocide committed in East Timor in 1999, before, during, and after the referendum. The atmosphere surrounding the 2002 presidential vote could not have been more different to that of the referendum. The two rival candidates hugged. The result was a foregone conclusion. The only rival to independence hero Xanana Gusmao was Xavier do Amaral, who said he only joined the race to educate the East Timorese in the meaning of democracy.
On May 19, East Timor officially became a nation, when Xanana Gusmao was inaugurated as president and the United Nations handed over power to the fledgling government.
APTN
Dili, East Timor - January 21, 2002
Audience at truth and reconciliation commission hearing
SOUNDBITE (English) Jose Ramos Horta, East Timorese Interim Foreign Minister
"Our past, present and future can never be separated. We are committed to reconciliation."
APTN
Jakarta, Indonesia - February 21, 2002
Exterior Jakarta human rights court
Sidabalok, the court's secretary, receiving documents
Close up documents, tilt up to Sidabalok
APTN
Dili, East Timor - April 14, 2002
Presidential candidates Xanana Gusmao and rival Xavier do Amaral hug outside polling station
Cutaway polling station sign
Gusmao and do Amaral come out together to vote
SOUNDBITE (English) Bishop Carlos Belo, East Timor Bishop and Nobel Peace Laureate
"It's an historical moment. The people of East Timor are voting for the first time for their president."
APTN
Taci Tolo, East Timor
Parliamentary speaker Francisco Guterres puts sash around Gusmao's soldiers and his inauguration as president
SOUNDBITE (English) Kofi Annan, UN Secretary General
"I have the honour to transfer executive authority from the United Nations Transitional Administration to the institutions of the Democratic Republic of East Timor."
10:46:03
Indonesia
Religious strife between Christians and Muslims continued in Ambon and the surrounding Maluku islands. Up to 9,000 people were killed and tens of thousands were forced to flee their homes in two years of fighting in the archipelago, known as the Spice Islands during Dutch colonial rule. A fragile peace deal between the two communities was frequently undermined by violence. At the beginning of April a deadly blast killed four people. Later in the month 12 were killed in a Christian village by a raid of suspected paramilitary Muslims.
In Jakarta, the country's best-known Islamic militant went on trial. Jafar Umar Thalib, leader of militant group Laskar Jihad, was accused of inciting violence against Christians in the Maluku province. In his first court appearance, Thalib's supporters rallied for his cause. But when his trial began in October, in the wake of the Bali bombing, his extremist group had apparently disbanded.
APTN
Ambon, Indonesia - April 3, 2002
Various people in street after bomb blast shouting, 'Fire, fire'
People throwing rocks at government building
People shouting at army
Various of burning governor's office building
Police shooting in the air to disperse crowd
APTN
Ambon, Indonesia - April 28, 2002
Pan from house to people fleeing
Church on fire
Wounded person being carried away by people
APTN
Jakarta, Indonesia - August 15, 2002
Jafar Umar Thalib walking into court and sitting, supporters chanting 'Allah u Akhbar' (God is great)
10:47:06
Cambodia Statuettes
In Cambodia, a stash of ancient Buddha statues was uncovered by chance after centuries buried in the ground. There were 31 statues in all - 27 of them said to be made of gold. They were found during construction work in the grounds of Po Pich temple in Komphong Thom province, 130 kilometres north of Phnom Penh. Workers digging out foundations for a new temple discovered a jar and found the statues inside. Some are only as big as a man's thumb. Hundreds of pilgrims and tourists flocked to see them.
APTN
Kompong Thom - August 2002
Wide shot monks in grounds of temple
Grounds of temple, showing excavation area
Close up statues
Pilgrims looking at statues
Statues
10:47:29
Myanmar Suu Kyi released
Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi was freed from house arrest in May after 19 months. She immediately pledged to do all she could to bring back democracy to military-ruled Myanmar. Suu Kyi arrived at the ramshackle building housing her National League for Democracy party to a tumultuous welcome by thousands of cheering supporters, only a few hours after the junta announced her release.
APTN
Rangoon, Myanmar - May 6, 2002
Various Burmese Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi walking through street swamped by crowd
Suu Kyi on stage being cheered by crowd
SOUNDBITE (English) Burmese Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi
"The party was founded in order to bring democracy to Burma, so that is our task, that is what we have to do. And I, as general secretary of the party, must do everything I can to make sure that democracy comes to Burma quickly and comes in the right way."
10:48:00
Pakistan Rape
There was international outcry when news emerged about the gang-rape of a woman in rural Pakistan. A tribal council apparently ordered the rape as punishment against the woman's family. The four rapists went on trial in the remote Pakistani village where the rape happened. Ten other men also went on trial in the same court for allegedly ordering the rape. Eight of the 14 were acquitted; the other six were sentenced to death.
APTN
Dera Ghazi Khan, Pakistan - July 26, 2002
Exterior court - men accused of gang-raping woman after tribal council ordered it to punish her family
Pan of accused
APTN
Dera Ghazi Khan, Pakistan - August 3, 2002
Close up rape victim Mukhtaran Mai, pull out to victim standing with defence team and family
Close up victim's face
Accused in chains
APTN
Meerwala, Punjab Province, Pakistan - July 6, 2002
Rape victim Mukhtaran Mai and her brother Shakoor Mai
SOUNDBITE (Urdu) Mukhtaran Mai, Rape Victim
"I was dragged by the people, I begged them not to do this, I begged them to stop, but they would not. My uncle and my father tried to stop them but they did not stop."
Father crying
10:48:51
Pakistan Referendum
Pakistan's president Pervez Musharraf won a controversial referendum to endorse his rule for a further five years, ending a three-year military dictatorship. He won the referendum by 98 percent, although it was marred by accusations of widespread manipulation.
APTN
Rawalpindi, Pakistan - April 30, 2002
Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf voting
Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf at polling station
APTN
Islamabad, Pakistan - April 30, 2002
Men emptying ballot box
APTN
Islamabad - May 1, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Imran Khan, Former Prime Ministerial Candidate
"The reason my party supported him was that we feel he should now clean up Pakistani politics - our judicial system and our election commission."
10:49:17
Russia Clashes
Clashes broke out in Moscow between police and leftist radicals calling for a revolution. Police responded with clubs and batons when the protestors tried to force their way through police cordons.
APTN
Moscow - September 15, 2002
Ultra-leftist youth chanting slogans at protest calling for revolution
Line of riot police
Protestors pushing past police cordon
Police fighting with protestors
SOUNDBITE (Russian) Leader of demonstrators
"If the proletariat seize power, we will be in a better position to deal with the bourgeoisie and restore order. Thanks comrades, long live the revolution."
10:49:44
Koreas
South and North Korea embarked on cabinet level talks to revive a reconciliation process that thrived after a historic summit in 2000, but stalled amid US-North Korean tension. A 29-member North Korean delegation flew into Seoul aboard a Soviet-built plane for the three-day talks. The talks focused on previous agreements reached since relations thawed between the two Koreas. Among those was the demining programme in the demilitarised zone (DMZ) which divides the two countries. Demining the area will clear the way for rail and road links across the two sides.
POOL
Seoul, South Korea - August 12, 2002
Head of North Korea delegation, Kim Ryong Song, shaking hands with South Korean counterpart, Jeong Se-hyun, at high-level talks aimed at reviving reconciliation process
APTN
Paju, Near demilitazised zone between the two Koreas - September 19, 2002
Wide shot South Korean soldiers opening wire door at border line in southern part of DMZ
Land mine breaker inside DMZ
Border line where Gyeongui railway was disconnected
Close up road sign directing Seoul and Pyongyang
APTN
Pyongyang, North Korea - September 23, 2002
Various central Pyongyang with pictures of North Korean leader Kim II Sung pictures
Various of statue of Kim II Sung in square named after him
Disasters
10:50:31
Volcanoes
The Congolese town of Goma was all but swallowed up when the nearby volcano of Nyiragongo sent down three major flows of lava. Between 50 and 100 people died in the initial lava flows, and another 60 died when a petrol station exploded. An estimated 300 thousand people fled east following the eruption, taking refuge in already overflowing refugee camps in neighbouring Rwanda.
When the Kilauea volcano erupted in Hawaii, thousands of tourists flocked to see the nightly light show as the lava flowed into the sea. Officials warned the lava was giving off noxious gas but there were no reported injuries. Kilauea is the world's most active volcano.
Europe's most active volcano, Mount Etna, erupted in October. The violent and devastating flank eruption took place after only a few hours of seismic activity. The airport was closed as ash poured into the nearby town of Catania. People living in the town were given gas masks while those from hamlets further up the mountain were evacuated to tents in the valley.
Amateur Video
Goma, Congo - January 18, 2002
People carrying belongings evacuating town
Goma, Congo - January 20, 2002
Night shot of lava flowing in to Lake Kivu, hissing and steaming
Goma, Congo - January 18, 2002
Man pulling aside piece of burning lava with a stick
APTN
Hawaii - September 13, 2002
Two shots of lava flowing into ocean at night
APTN
Sicily, Italy - October 31, 2002
Various night shots of Mount Etna spewing lava (south side)
Santa Venerina, north side of Mount Etna - October 31, 2002
Tented city where local resident displaced from hamlets further up mountain are staying
Sicily, Italy - October 30, 2002
Smoke rising in the distance
Rock in foreground, lava slowly moving in background
Various burning lava
10:51:35
Earthquake
In April a strong earthquake hit Georgia, killing three people in the capital Tbilisi when a building collapsed. Residents poured into the streets and slept in their cars rather than risk returning to their homes.
A 6.0 magnitude quake struck north-west Iran in June, killing at least 500 people. Survivors who had lost their homes stayed in tents. According to the International Red Cross, almost a hundred villages were destroyed.
Italy was in mourning after an earthquake hit the small town of San Giuliano di Puglia, causing its school to collapse. 26 children and three adults were killed. Angry questions were raised about the enforcement of laws governing building safety in the region.
APTN
Tbilisi, Georgia - April 26, 2002
Day shot of crushed car with rubble all around it
Night shot of body being carried onto stretcher from rubble
APTN
Tabalkash village, Northern Iran - June 24, 2002
Two shots of damage caused by earthquake
Various of tents where earthquake survivors were living and people in camp
APTN
San Giuliano di Puglia, Italy - November 1, 2002
Shot from top of hill above town immediately after quake struck
Close up body covered in green blanket being carried out by firemen and paramedics
Pan from pile of rubble to crying couple walking
Various of collapsed houses
Rescuers as they bring up a survivor
Rescue workers lifting small child's desk
10:52:36
Forest fires
Forest and peat-bog fires raged in woodlands across Russia in August. The worst of the fires burnt in the area east of Moscow, causing a thick smog to drench the capital.
APTN
Shature, Near Moscow - August 2, 2002
Close up fire on forest floor, tilts up to trees and smoke
Various man in military uniform spraying ground with hose
Wide pan of firemen wetting smouldering ground
APTN
Moscow - September 4, 2002
Moscow river in smog with silhouettes of buildings
APTN
Moscow - August 15, 2002
Church domes in smoke
10:53:04
Crashes
In September, 23 people were killed when a bus in Guatemala plunged down a steep ravine and into a river below. Witnesses told police that the driver of the bus lost control after speeding to beat another bus to the next stop.
Earlier that month in Bolivia dozens of people were killed when a bus crashed off Bolivia's infamous 'road of death' near the capital La Paz.
There were echoes of September 11 when in April in Milan a small plane with only the pilot on board crashed into a downtown Milan office skyscraper. Four people were killed and 60 injured. The impact destroyed two floors of the Pirelli building, once the headquarters of Italy's tyre manufacturer.
In the Ukraine in July, tragedy hit the Western city of Lviv, when a fighter jet crashed into the crowd at an airshow killing 83 people and injuring 116. The Su-27 warplane clipped the ground while performing aerobatic moves and sheared through a crowd of hundreds before exploding in a ball of fire. Officials announced two days of national mourning.
The small duchy of Luxembourg suffered its worst air disaster when a twin-engine plane coming from Berlin crashed in dense fog close to Luxembourg airport. 20 people were killed.
In Tanzania in June a horrific train crash left more than 170 people dead. More than 1200 people were on the train when it rolled backwards and collided with a freight train going in the same direction.
Another train crash, this time in Egypt, claimed the lives of 363 people. Over one hundred of the victims were too badly burnt to be recognised and were buried after a mass funeral service in Cairo.
In the UK, a high-speed express train derailed on its way through a station north of London. One carriage leapt onto the platform, scattering waiting passengers and killing seven on board. The accident, the sixth fatal accident since 1997 on Britain's widely criticised rail network, raised more questions about rail safety.
Eight people were killed and dozens injured when a train derailed in northeastern Sicily. The express train was travelling from Messina to Palermo when it crashed into a bridge.
APTN
Huehuetenango, Guatemala - September 30, 2002
Aerial of crash area
Two shots of dead bodies of victims being rescued by fire department rescue team
APTN
Sacramento, Bolivia - September 2, 2002
Pan from rescue workers on side of road to ravine into which the bus slid
Various of rescue workers pulling a rope lifting victims out of the ravine
Various rescue worker scaling cliff face with victim on stretcher tied to a rope
APTN
Milan - April 18, 2002
Side view of Pirelli building with smoke coming out of side, pull out to street
Building with smoke coming out
Street covered in paper and emergency vehicle
APTN
Lviv - July 28, 2002
Various lists of injured at hospital
Relative with head in hands outside hospital
Relatives in car mourning
APTN
Lviv - July 30, 2002
Various funeral ceremony
Mothers crying on coffins
APTN
Luxembourg - November 6, 2002
Tail fin
Rescue workers
Crane above tail fin
Firemen carrying body
Rescue workers with crane
APTN
Igandu, Tanzania - June 25, 2002
Wide shot crash site
Derailed carriages
Rescue workers crawling through wreckage
Rescue workers examining wreckage
APTN
Ayyat, Egypt - February 20, 2002
Burnt out train
Rescue workers in carriage
Barred window
APTN
Potters Bar, Near London, England - May 10, 2002
Carriage of train wedged in between platform and canopy
Police standing next to wreckage on track
Wide shot platforms
APTN
Rometta, Sicily - July 21, 2002
Various derailed train
Police near train wreck
10:55:42
Hurricane/Typhoons
Hurricane Lili caused massive damage in October as it tore its way through the Caribbean. Thousands of people in Western Cuba fled their homes as the hurricane hit the island. There were no casualties in Cuba although the storm killed seven people in Jamaica and St. Vincent.
A week earlier, Hurrican Isidore passed by Cuba causing only heavy rains before it tore up to Mexico, its wind speeds increasing to up to 200 kilometres per hour (125 miles per hour). In Mexico's Yucatan peninsula, the hurricane caused massive damage, ripping up trees, tearing away roofs and blocking highways. Thousands were left homeless.
And in August over a hundred people died in unprecedented flooding across Europe. Rains unleashed raging waters that swept away Russian tourists, triggered landslides in Germany and Switzerland and shut down shipping on the Danube in Austria.
Saxony state capital Dresden was hit by high waters, which flooded the famed Semper Opera and the Zwinger palace.
The floods also devastated the Czech capital Prague. 250 residents and tourists had to be evacuated from the city's Old Town as the rain-engorged river Vltava crested.
In August in China, rising river levels killed more than 200 and threatened 10 million people. More than 250 thousand people were evacuated from areas around Dongting Lake.
APTN
Pinar del Rio, Cuba - October 1, 2002
Two shots of heavy rain falling on road during hurricane Lili
Top of trees blown by strong winds
APTN
Las Canas, Cuba - October 1, 2002
Roof of home damaged by winds
Various homes destroyed by Hurricane Lili
APTN
Merida, Yucatan, Mexico - September 23, 2002
Street blocked by fallen trees
Various debris in the streets
Fallen trees in Merida streets
10:56:27
Floods
APTN
Steyr, Austria - August 12, 2002
Buildings and flooded river
Building arch above flooded river, zoom out
Car in river
APTN
Deutschen Area, Germany - August 18, 2002
Various aerials flooded streets and fields near area where dyke collapsed
APTN
Bitterfeld, Germany - August 18, 2002
Various aerials Torgau town surrounded by lake of floodwater
APTN
Dresden, Germany - August 14, 2002
Flooded street with half submerged cars, rescue vehicles passes along
Amateur Video
Prague, Czech Republic - August 14, 2002
Zoom into man struggling in flood water underneath Prague bridge
APTN
Prague, Czech Republic - August 14, 2002
Various submerged river club
Various flooded part of the road, with water up to level of street signs
Various two men in dinghy in flooded road, water covers some ground floor windows
Various man in canoe, passing shops with water halfway up ground floor windows
Various of military unloading sandbags from trucks and making barrier by river
APTN
Lao Jie, Near Yueyang, China - August 22, 2002
Flooded town of Lao Jie, near Dongting Lake
Man on makeshift raft
Man in water opening door
Houses submerged in water
10:57:46
Oil Spills
A terrorist attack was responsible for a blast on the French supertanker the Limburg off the coast of Yemen in October. One Bulgarian member of the Limburg's crew died in the explosion that started a blaze aboard the tanker and spilled 90,000 barrels of oil.
And environmental disaster struck in Spain in November when the Prestige tanker sunk off its northern coast. Officials waited for the worst as oil leaked from the tanker's cargo. The ship first started leaking on November 13 after cracking its hull in a storm in the Atlantic Ocean. After six days, it finally sunk. The oil spilled contaminated a region that suffered another big spill a decade ago. The oil blackened hundreds of kilometers (miles) of beach and rocky shore and forced a ban on fishing and seafood harvesting along a 500 kilometer (300 mile) stretch. Tens of thousands of fishermen and other sea-dependent workers were forced to live off government handouts.
APTN
Mukalla, Yemen - October 8, 2002
Various aerials of Limburg supertanker with damage visible
Various oil washed up on the beach
APTN
Cape Finisterre, Northern Spain - November 20, 2002
Various aerials of area threatened by slick
APTN
Camarinas, Spanish coast - November 17, 2002
Various oil on rocks
APTN
Arteixo beach, Galicia, Spain - November 18, 2002
Oil slick on beach
Cormorant covered in oil flapping its wings
World Politics
10:58:37
World leaders signed the momentous NATO-Russia pact in Rome in May, hailed as the beginning of a new era in international relations. Leaders gathered at a military base near Rome for the signing of the agreement, which effectively made Russia junior partner in NATO by creating a NATO-Russia council.
In November, NATO leaders met in Prague where, in an historic shift, the organisation expanded its membership beyond the borders of the former Soviet Union. NATO invited seven ex-communist countries - Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Bulgaria, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia - to become members.
The summit, NATO's first beyond the old Iron Curtain, was marred slightly when two young Russian protestors threw tomatoes at the alliance's secretary general during the closing news conference. The protestors, shouting, 'Nato is worse than the Gestapo' missed George Robertson as he was shielded by officials.
In June, Rome played host to the United Nations World Food Summit. Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe skirted a travel ban to attend the conference amid complaints his policies were worsening the food crisis in the country. He said the future of agriculture in the country was improving and that his controversial land reform programme was a force for positive change. Zimbabwe's opposition accused the government of withholding food aid from its supporters even as the country was experiencing a major food crisis. By November, more than half the population of 12.5 million was facing famine.
In June, world leaders from the Group of Eight met in a remote mountain resort in Canada, avoiding the kind of mass anti-globalisation protests that in previous years have accompanied such summits. While the protests took place in the valley below, and in the Canadian capital, the leaders held bilateral and group meetings, discussing terrorism., economic growth and the Middle East.
Johannesburg was the setting for the ten-day Earth Summit, last held in Rio, Brazil, a decade earlier. World leaders and extensive delegations arrived with the aim of agreeing a world plan to tackle poverty and save the environment. The summit was billed as the largest UN gathering ever. US President George W Bush was notable by his absence from the summit, a fact denounced by environmental groups. But US delegates at the conference dismissed scepticism that the US was not committed to sustainable development. Daily protests, taking place at the perimeter of the UN convention centre, accompanied the summit. A group calling themselves "Indian and African farmers" held a colourful protest against the Common Agricultural Policy which gives European farmers subsidies. But not all the protests were peaceful. One night anti-globalisation protestors clashed with police at a Johannesburg university. The police fired stun grenades at the crowd. On another night riot police used water cannons against pro-Palestinian activists who tried to storm a police station to rescue companions arrested earlier in the day for trying to confront Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres.
APTN
Rome, Italy - May 28, 2002
Exteriors of military base where summit was held
NATO Secretary General George Robertson and Russian President Vladimir Putin walking
Overhead interior of round table
Leaders at table
Putin
SOUNDBITE (English) George W Bush, US President
"Two former foes are now joined together as partners, overcoming 50 years of division and a decade of uncertainty, as this partnership takes us closer to an even larger goal - a Europe that is whole, free and at peace for the first time in history."
Various Putin signing
Pan of leaders posing for a photo
APTN
Prague, Czech Republic - November 21, 2002
Conference Hall
Various delegates at NATO conference
APTN
Prague, Czech Republic - November 22, 2002
Two men standing and throwing tomatoes and starting shouting
Protestors start shouting at Robertson, one wearing an arm band takes off his coat
Protestors being escorted by security
Robertson standing with conference officials in blue coats
APTN
Rome, Italy - June 10, 2002
Exterior Food and Agriculture Organisation headquarters where the UN World Food Summit took place
Various Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe arriving
South African President Thabo Mbeki arriving
Interior conference - Various UN Secretary General Kofi Annan meeting Mugabe
Conference
Mugabe walking to podium
SOUNDBITE (English) Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwean President
"Contrary to widely disseminated misrepresentations by our detractors, there is now a brighter future for our farming community across colour, gender, and ethnic divides. Our land reform programme is indeed a firm launching pad for your fight against poverty and food insecurity."
POOL
Calgary, Canada - June 25, 2002
Canadian flag
German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder refusing to put on welcoming white cowboy hat, instead placing it on official
Pan view as helicopters head to Kannanaskis
APTN
Kannanaskis, Canada - June 26, 2002
Wide interior meeting room
Leaders at family photo opportunity with mountains in the background
POOL
Johannesburg, South Africa - September 2, 2002
Various aerials of Johannesburg
Former South African President Nelson Mandela, walking
Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe arriving
APTN
Johannesburg, South Africa - August 29, 2002
Puppet of US President George W Bush at mock theatre event to protest his absence from the summit
APTN
Johannesburg, South Africa - August 28, 2002
Various farmers holding banners reading "freedom to trade" and "trade not aid"
APTN
Johannesburg, South Africa - August 24, 2002
Various of protestors marching with candles
Audio of stun grenades exploding, crowd running away
APTN
Johannesburg, South Africa - September 2, 2002
Tracking shot along line of riot police with water cannon tenders behind
Water cannon trucks spray mob of chanting pro-Palestinian activists outside police station where other activists earlier in the day had been taken
US Politics and Economics
11:02:25
The US justice department opened an investigation into collapsed energy firm Enron. Many Enron employees lost their life savings when the company filed for bankruptcy on December 2. Arthur Anderson, the firm responsible for checking Enron's books, fired the man who handled the Enron account. David Duncan shredded documents after learning Enron was under government investigation. He said he was acting on the advice of an Andersen lawyer. The situation brought into question the practice firms like Arthur Andersen acting as auditors as well as advisers on how to maximise a company's profits.
Telecommunications giant WorldCom joined the list of spectacular corporate collapses in June when it too applied for bankruptcy. A month earlier, it had disclosed it had inflated profits by nearly four POOL billion dollars through deceptive accounting. It was the largest bankruptcy in US history. WorldCom, based in Clinton, Mississippi, announced it would lay off 17 thousand workers, or 20 percent of its global workforce. A US Congressional panel launched an investigation into WorldCom's accounting irregularities.
In a bid to restore investor confidence President George W Bush signed into law a far-reaching government crackdown on business fraud. Bush said the new legislation should act as a warning to corporate criminals. The measure tightened regulation of companies' financial reporting and provided a new oversight of independent auditors.
Share prices on Wall Street tumbled, increasing fears about a US recession.
Meanwhile, the FBI warned Al Qaida could be planning another terrorist attack. The White House said Americans should remain vigilant.
But the FBI also came under fire. FBI director Robert Mueller told a Congressional hearing into FBI failures that the organisation was aware of the need for massive change, especially in its cumbersome bureaucracy.
APTN
Houston, Texas - November 29, 2001
Exterior views of Enron office
APTN
Houston, Texas - November 29, 2001
Close up employees loading boxes into car
Pan up from employees to Enron building
APTN
Washington DC - January 15, 2002
Various investigators looking at Enron documents
APTN
Washington DC - February 2002
Enron Chief Executive Office Kenneth Lay entering Senate Committee hearing
Wide shot committee hearing
Chicago, Illinois - File
Arthur Andersen headquarters
Interior Arthur Andersen headquarters
APTN
Ashburn, Virginia - June 28, 2002
Various exteriors of WorldCom offices
APTN
Washington DC - June 28, 2002
Various subpoena sent to WorldCom CEOs by House Financial Committee
POOL
Clinton, Mississippi - File
Pan of WorldCom employees at terminals
Close up fibre optic device
POOL
Washington DC - July 8, 2002
Witnesses raise their right hand and are sworn in at congressional hearing into WorldCom
SOUNDBITE (English) John Sidgmore, WorldCom's president and chief executive officer
"We are fighting for our life. I think that should be clear to everybody if you read the newspapers."
POOL
Washington DC - July 30, 2002
US President George W Bush walks into room in White House
SOUNDBITE (English) George W Bush, US President
"This law says to every dishonest corporate leader, you will be exposed and punished. The era of low standards and false profits is over. No boardroom in America is above or beyond the law."
APTN
New York City - July 22, 2002
New York Stock Exchange exterior
NYSE interior pan across floor
NYSE closing bell
APTN
Washington DC - FILE
FBI headquarters
CIA headquarters
POOL
Washington DC - June 6, 2002
Congressional hearing into FBI failures
SOUNDBITE (English) Robert Mueller, FBI Director
"The need for change was apparent even before September 11. It has become even more urgent since then."
European Politics and Economics
11:04:50
12 European countries ushered in the New Year with the introduction of a new currency, the euro. As firework displays in the capitals celebrated the new year and the new currency, revellers flocked to the cash machines for their first look at the brightly coloured new notes. At a ceremony in Vienna, Austria, EC President Romano Prodi, said the euro would strengthen the European Union. More than 15 billion notes and 52 billion coins were produced for the switchover.
European Union expansion came closer to reality. 2004 was set as a date for eight east European nations, and Malta and Cyprus, to join the union. EU Commission President Romano Prodi said the move would be an historic achievement.
There was shock and anger in France when far right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen came second in a first round presidential vote, ahead of incumbent Prime Minister Lionel Jospin who had been expected to go head to head with President Jacques Chirac in the second round run-off. Anti-Le Pen demonstrators clashed with police in Paris and in other French cities. In the event, Chirac won re-election by a landslide, but the first round results were a stark warning about the rise of the far right, both in France and the rest of Europe.
In July, Chirac survived an assassination attempt after a man fired at him from the crowd during Bastille Day celebrations. The attacker, who was described as an emotionally disturbed Neo-Nazi, pulled a rifle from a guitar case and fired off one shot before he was wrestled to the ground. Chirac was riding an open-topped jeep just tens of metres (yards) away. Cries of alarm from the crowd alerted police, who wrestled him to the ground with the help of spectators.
In the Netherlands, right-wing leader Pim Fortuyn was gunned down outside a radio station in Hilversum where he had been giving an interview. The killer was animal rights activist Volkert van der Graaf who was caught moments after the killing with the gun still cocked. The killing shocked the Netherlands and thousands of mourners gathered outside Fortuyn's Rotterdam house to pay their respects.
VNR
FILE
Euro notes being printed
APTN
Vienna, Austria - January 1, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Romano Prodi, European Commission President
"Our wish is that the euro is the beginning of a stronger European Union. We shall be the best in the world, the best in the world."
APTN
Athens, Greece - January 1, 2002
Fireworks being launched into the sky
Euro pyramid
Euro pyramid being lit up
APTN
Maastricht, The Netherlands - January 1, 2002
Acrobat swinging from euro tree
Various of performer in giant euro coin
APTN
Paris, France - January 1, 2002
People spraying champagne in the Champs Elysee
APTN
Paris, France - July 16, 2002
Wide shot Eiffel Tower
APTN
Paris, France - May 5, 2002
Boards outside polling station, swastika on Jean-Marie Le Pen poster
Far right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen voting
APTN
Paris, France - April 21, 2002
Noel Mamere, protest leader and defeated presidential candidate for the Green Party, chanting "Down with the National Front"
APTN
Paris, France - April 22, 2002
Demonstrators scuffling with police, one having tear gas sprayed in his face
POOL
Paris, France - July 14, 2002
Close up Jacques Chirac in jeep with audio of gunshot
APTN
Rotterdam, The Netherlands - May 10, 2002
Mourners at grave of murdered Dutch right-wing politician Pim Fortuyn
APTN
Rotterdam, The Netherlands - May 6, 2002
Mourners approach house, man salutes Pim Fortuyn's house
Africa politics
11:06:16
Zimbabwe in March held presidential elections. Incumbent Robert Mugabe won by a landslide, but there were widespread reports of vote-fixing and political violence. The Commonwealth suspended Zimbabwe from its councils for one year because of the violence. Meanwhile Mugabe continued his drive to evict white farmers from their land, as part of his land reform campaign. About 95 percent of Zimbabwe's white-owned farms were earmarked for redistribution to blacks. The land seizure policies, combined with a massive drought, contributed towards massive food shortages. Farmers who resisted eviction often fell victim to militia violence, ignored by the police.
The Miss World competition was moved to London after religious rioting in Nigeria killed more than 200 people. The rioting began in the northern Nigerian city of Kaduna after a newspaper published an article that said the Muslim prophet Mohammed would have approved of the event.
In Madagascar, there was political upheaval following a disputed presidential election in December 2001. Popular Marc Ravalomanana, the mayor of the capital, Antananarivo, claimed he'd won more than half of the vote, and that therefore it shouldn't go to a second round. In February Ravalomanana declared himself president. Incumbent Didier Ratskira proclaimed martial law that sparked violence on a massive scale. 11 people were shot and killed in one day by Ratskira's supporters. Eventually, after a six-month struggle, the US and France recognised Ravalomanana as the legitimate leader. Ratsiraka flew to France and his forces on the island switched sides.
In the Ivory Coast a month long rebellion came to an end when rebels signed a truce to open talks with the government. Tuo Fozie, a rebel official, signed the cease-fire with West African mediators in the city of Bouake, in rebel hands since the uprising began with a bloody coup attempt on September 19.
The rebels seized much of the northern half of the country. At the core of the insurgency were 750-800 ex-soldiers, many dismissed from Ivory Coast's army for suspected disloyalty. The uprising, which killed hundreds of people, gathered support from Ivorians in the north, who complain that the country's southern-based government treats them poorly.
There was international outrage as news emerged that a woman in Nigeria had been sentenced to death by stoning for adultery. Safiya Hussaini was sentenced in October by an Islamic court after she conceived a child with a married neighbour. An appeal court eventually acquitted her.
APTN
Harare, Zimbabwe - March 9, 2002
Journalists, pan to Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe putting paper in ballot box
Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, of the Movement for Democratic Change, walking towards camera outside his home
Various of MDC supporters with bandages on their faces speaking to journalists saying they were attacked
APTN
London, England - March 19, 2002
Round table of Commonwealth troika (with Australian Prime Minister John Howard, South African President Thabo Mbeki and Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo) and Commonwealth Secretary General Don McKinnon
APTN
Marondera, Zimbabwe - August 16, 2002
Wide shot of belongings on lawn after farmer Althea Morgan was forced to leave her farm at gunpoint
SOUNDBITE (English) Althea Morgan, Farm owner
"They just said you've got five hours to get out, and they stood and watched over us with their guns."
APTN
Darwendale, Zimbabwe - September 9, 2002
Farmer Debbie Swales being comforted after being evicted
Various trucks leaving Swales' farm with their belongings
APTN
Abuja, Nigeria - November 23, 2002
Beauty queens in hotel lobby
Kaduna, Nigeria - November 23, 2002
Fire in the street during violence in Kaduna which erupted because of Miss World competition
Building with smoke billowing out
Zoom into church
Body on ground
APTN
Antananarivo, Madagascar - February 4, 2002
Various shots of thousands of protestors in Antananarivo's Independence Square, calling for Marc Ravalomanana to be president
APTN
Antananarivo, Madagascar - March 3, 2002
Armed soldiers in the street
Various crowd standing in front of flames
Audio tear gas being fired, opposition supporters running through the streets
Soldiers in street
APTN
Bouake, Ivory Coast - October 17, 2002
Tuo Fozie, rebel official, arriving with rebel delegation
Wide of mediators
Senegalese Foreign Minister Cheikh Tidiane Gadio and Fozie signing
Handshake
APTN
Sokoto State, Nigeria - March 25, 2002
Court room hearing stoning case
Safiya Hussaini laughing as she hears of acquittal
Interior court
Various of Hussaini and 15 month old baby girl Adama
Muslim judges leaving court after acquittal
Latin American News and Politics
11:09:06
Colombia's 38-year civil war continued into 2002. Bogota was wracked by a wave of terrorist attacks, most of them blamed on the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC. In January a blast in the capital Bogota killed four policemen and a child. The bomb exploded in a restaurant often frequented by police officers from a nearby police station. Then, on the day of President Alvaro Uribe's inauguration in August, at least six small bombs exploded in several Bogota neighbourhoods. No one was killed but the blasts caused massive damage to property. Uribe, the survivor of several assassination attempts, took the oath of office in the parliament building, foregoing the usual outdoor inauguration ceremony. In September police announced they had captured four people involved in the August 7 assassination attempt.
Unrest continued in Argentina over the economic crisis which lead to the collapse of President Fernando de la Rua's government in December. Protestors demanding better employment rights and the end of a bank freeze, clashed with riot police in the capital and other cities.
Farmers' protests forced the Mexican government to back out of plans to build a new six-runway airport on the capital's outskirts. In an explosive five-day standoff in July, the farmers, who said they would not receive sufficient compensation for having the airport built on their land, blocked roads and took 15 hostages, threatening to kill them. They handed over the hostages in exchange for the release of several fellow protestors. And afterwards the government said it would cancel plans to build the airport in San Salvado Atenco.
APTN
Bogota, Colombia - January 25, 2002
Street where bomb exploded
Police truck and dead body
Restaurant where bomb exploded
Police working around police truck and damage
APTN
Bogota, Colombia - August 7, 2002
Various shots of cars with smashed windows following explosion on the same day as Uribe's inauguration
Soldiers looking at blast area
Broken window of building
POOL
Bogota, Colombia - August 7, 2002
Various Colombian President Alvaro Uribe receiving presidential sash
APTN
Bogota, Colombia - September 13, 2002
Various people accused of being behind Uribe assassination attempt, being displayed to the press
Various weapons seized
APTN
Buenos Aires, Argentina - January 15, 2002
Protestors
Casa Rosada (presidential palace) with guard at fenced gate, pan to protestors wearing bandanas covering their faces
APTN
Buenos Aires, Argentina - January 11, 2002
Riot police
Shirtless rioters throwing rocks and missiles at riot police
Various of riot police throwing tear gas
Pull back from smashed window of bank with graffiti
APTN
San Salvador Atenco, Mexico - July 12, 2002
Road blocked by trucks in protest at planned airport
Farmer making club
Burnt car being used as a barricade
Boxes filled with petrol bombs
APTN
Outside San Salvador Atenco, Mexico - July 12, 2002
Various youths with machetes sitting in the back of a pick-up truck
Various state police trucks
APTN
San Salvador Atenco, Mexico - July 13, 2002
Farmers at roadblock
Graffiti saying 'No airport'
Wide of hostages being held by farmers
APTN
San Salvador Atenco, Mexico - July 15, 2002
Farmers gathered, raising their machetes
Wide hostages being released
Pope John Paul II
11:11:36
Despite his age and frailty, Pope John Paul II showed no sign of moderating his schedule. His travel in 2002 included tours places as far flung as Mexico, Canada and Azerbaijan.
In Italy he held a day of prayers for world peace in Assisi, the birthplace of St. Francis. He also made a one-day visit to Ischia, an Italian island in the Mediterranean Sea near Capri. He used that occasion to make an appeal for peace in the Middle East, an appeal he repeated throughout the year as the conflict between the Palestinians and the Israelis escalated.
In May, the 82-year-old pope looked increasingly exhausted during a trip to Bulgaria and Azerbaijan. Throughout the visit, the Pontiff was wheeled around on a special trolley. Nonetheless he had a packed schedule which included a visit by helicopter to the Rila Monastery, one of Bulgaria's holiest sites.
In August the Pope attended the World Youth Day celebrations in Toronto, Canada. He surprised many by walking down the stairs of his plane. But a week later, in Guatemala, he used a lift to disembark.
Later that month, the Pope made an emotional trip, possibly his last, back to his native Poland. Following mass in Krakow, he stopped at the house he once shared with his father. Residents of Tyniecka Street chanted, "Welcome home" as the popemobile stopped outside No. 10, the grey two-storey building that used to be his home.
POOL
Assisi, Italy - January 24, 2002
Pope seated in train
Pope being met by Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi
Exterior church
Various Christian prayer session with the Pope and Orthodox representative
POOL
Ischia Island , Italy - May 5, 2002
Marquee and Island
Pope entering mass
Pope singing prayer, then crossing himself, doves being released
Doves flying away
APTN
Baku, Azerbaijan - May 22, 2002
Pope meeting Azerbaijan's president Geidar Aliev
APTN
Toronto, Canada - July 23, 2002
Pope blessing children
POOL
Toronto, Canada - July 25, 2002
Pope walking onto stage
Pope smiling on stage
APTN
Guatemala City, Guatemala - July 29, 2002
Band playing national anthem
Pope standing
Pope waving to crowd
Close up Pope
POOL
Mexico City, Mexico - July 31/August 1, 2002
Aztec horn player
Pope blessing bread for ceremony
Woman taking bread from Pope
Various Indian women approaching altar and blessing him
APTN
Krakow, Poland - August 17, 2002
Plaque outside house
'Tyniecka 10' sign
Pope in popemobile arriving at house where he used to live with his father
Pope waving
The British Royal Family
11:14:05
2002 was the 50th jubilee for Britain's Queen Elizabeth II. But it was a year tinged with sadness for the Queen, with the loss of her sister Princess Margaret and Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, within weeks of each other.
Princess Margaret died aged 71 in February, having suffered at least two strokes in previous years.
Weeks later, on March 30th, the Queen Mother also passed away, aged 101. The Queen Mother held an unshakeable place in British affections for more than half a century, and thousands lined the streets of London to catch a glimpse of her funeral cortege. Her grandson, Prince Charles, paid tribute to her.
The public outpouring of grief following the deaths appeared to increase sympathy and support for the Queen and there was a genuine sense of celebration surrounding the jubilee in June. One of the highlights was a massive rock concert held at Buckingham Palace and relayed on massive screens to tens of thousands of fans in the plaza below the palace. The next day one million people turned out for a day of pomp, pageantry and carnival to crown the jubilee.
The trial of Princess Diana's former butler Paul Burrell collapsed after an intervention by the Queen. Burrell had been accused of stealing Diana's personal belongings after her death. Police removed around 300 items belonging to the princess from Mr. Burrell's home and it was a central part of the prosecution that he had told no one about the items. However the case fell through when the Queen mentioned to her son Prince Charles that Mr. Burrell had told her he was looking after some of Diana's things.
APTN
London, England - February 6, 2002
Queen Elizabeth II signs a large picture of herself while opening cancer centre at a hospital on the 50th anniversary of her father's death
POOL
London, England - August 4, 2000
Princess Margaret, Queen and Queen Mother walk out onto balcony of Buckingham Palace for Queen Mother's 100th birthday
APTN
London, England - August 4, 2001
Close up Princess Margaret in wheelchair
APTN
London, England - February 9, 2002
Buckingham Palace with flag flying at half mast to mark death of Princess Margaret
POOL
Windsor, England - February 15, 2002
Various Royal family walking down road towards the chapel doors for funeral of Princess Margaret
Coffin being carried down castle stairs
Coffin being carried towards hearse, coming to a halt
Queen, Prince Philip, and Viscount Linley and Lady Sarah Chatto watching from castle steps, the Queen wipes a tear from her eye
APTN
Windsor, England - March 31, 2002
Exterior Windsor Castle where Queen Mother died
APTN
London, England - March 31, 2002
Various of horse guards trotting along road
Various of floral tribute to the Queen Mother
APTN
London, England - April 1, 2002
Close up picture of Queen Mother on Union Jack left next to flowers
41 gun salute in Hyde Park
POOL
Windsor, England - April 1, 2002
Various shots of Queen Mother's coffin in chapel
POOL
London, England - April 1, 2002
SOUNDBITE (English) Prince Charles
"Ever since I was a child, I adored her. Her houses were always filled with an atmosphere of fun, laughter and affection."
POOL
Windsor, England - April 2, 2002
Queen Mother's coffin being carried out of Royal Chapel of All Saints
Coffin being loaded onto hearse
APTN
London, England - April 2, 2002
Dawn shot of Westminster and Big Ben
POOL
London, England - June 3, 2002
Night shots
Aerial of Buckingham Palace with crowd in grounds for jubilee concert
Close up, pan round Brian May, formerly of the rock group Queen, playing guitar
Pull out from May playing the British national anthem on guitar on top of the palace
SOUNDBITE (English) Prince Charles (on stage with the rest of the royal family)
"Mummy."
POOL
London, England - June 4, 2002
Wide of crowds in Mall
Flags waving
Queen and Prince Philip look up
APTN
Angola - File
Princess Diana and Paul Burrell during visit to Angola
30 Second Features
11:16:32
Boxers Mike Tyson and Lennox Lewis exchanged punches at a pre-fight press conference in New York City in January. After Tyson was introduced he walked on stage then faced the wing where Lewis was to enter. When Lewis stepped onto the stage, Tyson rushed him. After a tussle lasting several minutes, order was restored.
APTN
New York City, United States - January 22, 2002
Confrontation at news briefing between boxers Mike Tyson and Lennox Lewis, zoom into fight, pull out to wide shot of fight with cameramen surrounding the boxers
UPSOUND (English) Mike Tyson, shouting expletives
11:17:03
A group of young artists from Austria introduced a new strain of music to Europe. Spectators packed a concert hall in Brussels to hear 'The First Vienna Vegetable Orchestra', who makes all its music with vegetables. Carrots and cucumbers are handcrafted into wind instruments, pumpkins and leeks are the percussion, cabbage covers the strings.
APTN
Brussels, Belgium - September 21, 2002
Brochure reading 'The First Vienna Vegetable Orchestra'
Band arriving on stage
Various of band playing music using various vegetables as instruments
11:17:33
In January, fanciful ice sculptures of all shapes and sizes transformed one of China's northern-most cities into a winter wonderland. Harbin city is known for its subarctic climate. It really comes into its own when artisans gather for the annual Ice Lantern Festival. From January 5 to February 14 ice sculptures in the shape of animals and people line the streets. The largest display of sculpted ice and snow was this year located on the north bank of the Songhua River. 80-thousand cubic metres of ice and 120-thousand cubic metres of snow were used to create the frozen fantasy land, which spans an area of roughly 300-thousand square metres. At night the sculptures were illuminated from the inside with coloured lights. This year saw the 16th International Ice Sculpting Competition take place. Artisans from eleven different countries competed in the contest, which this year was won by Japan.
APTN
Harbin, China - January 2002
Night shots of fireworks exploding over Harbin
European-style ice building
Chinese-style ice building
Buddha snow sculpture at Zhaolin Park
Large mosque ice sculpture
Various people sliding down illuminated green ice ramp on side of mosque
Ice sculptures from competition
Winning ice sculpture
11:18:02
An internet website in Taiwan gave new meaning to the phrase 'news in brief,' because its three female presenters read the news wearing only their underwear. The 'Underview News,' was launched on January 7th on the website run by Taiwan's largest telecom company, Chunghua Telecom. The anchors, in their 20s, appear in carefully selected underwear.
APTN
Taipei, Taiwan - January 28, 2002
UPSOUND (Mandarin) Cameraman
"Four, three, two.."
Anchor reading news in underwear
Various clips from news broadcast on internet
APTN
Taipei, Taiwan - January 30, 2002
People sitting in front of monitors in an internet café
SOUNDBITE (Mandarin) Vox pop
"People would lose interest in this if the anchors didn't take their clothes off."
APTN
Taipei, Taiwan - January 28, 2002
Various editors at work in the studio
11:18:23
A Thai woman set an unofficial world record in October for spending 32 days in a roomful of 3400 scorpions. Kanchana Ketkeaw, a performance artist, was stung nine times during the attempt but she was not put off. She was already used to scorpions because she performs with them as part of a tourist attraction, putting them in her mouth and dancing with them.
APTN
Pattaya, Thailand - September 21, 2002
Kanchana Ketkeaw, in room full of scorpions
Scorpions on Kanchana
APTN
Pattaya, Thailand - October 23, 2002
Scorpion on Kanchana's neck
Various of Kanchana kissing scorpion
Last day of countdown calendar being peeled off
Kanchana stepping out of glass room with scorpions on shirt
11:19:02
Egyptian archaeologists made a startling discovery - six tombs dating back some 3,500 years to Egypt's golden age. The tombs were found near the house of the Old Kingdom near Cairo.
APTN
Saqqara - June 6, 2002
Wide of site and pyramid in background
Various of archaeologist brushing inscriptions
Close up inscriptions
Tilt down tomb
Various of site
Close up small statue found in one of the tombs
11:19:35
About 50 artists and architects displayed their visions for the rebuilding of the World Trade Center site at an exhibition in New York. While many designs had memorial aspects, only a few actually called for the entire 16-acre site to be made into a memorial.
APTN
New York City - January 25, 2002
Various shots of Max Protetch Gallery and close ups of works submitted
11:20:04
The United States Geological Survey (USGS) and NASA celebrated the 30th anniversary of Landsat, a photo-imaging programme that has been pictorially mapping the Earth's geographical changes over the decades. The 30-year archive of imagery, a scientific partnership between NASA and the USGS, provides historical detail that can help scientists understand and protect the planet.
In celebration of the 30th anniversary of the first Landsat launch, NASA and the USGS assembled an exhibit with 41 images taken over the last 30 years.
NASA
NASA - pictures taken from space
Aleutian clouds
Kalahari desert, Namibia
Terkezi Oasis, Chad
Iraqi emplacement
Great Salt Desert, Iran
Whirlpool in the air off Greenland
Richat structure, Mauritania
Lena Delta, Russia
Ganges River Delta
Volga River Delta
Enlarged portion of US showing smoke from Arizona wildfires (June 21, 2002)
Stop Press
11:20:54
Indonesian police announced they'd caught up with the two prime suspects for the Bali bombing in September. Amrozi, who like many Indonesians only uses one name, was displayed before the media. Police said Amrozi admitted owning a L3000 Mitsubishi minivan that was filled with at least 50 kilogrammes (110 pounds) of explosives.
APTN
Bali, Indonesia
Amrozi in handcuffs being brought into room
Indonesian police chief Da'I Bachtiar showing Amrozi to media, Amrozi sits down
Amrozi smiling
Amrozi's handcuffs being taken off
Close up Amrozi
Amrozi waving to media outside
11:21:44
Terrorists struck again in November, targeting holidaying Israelis in Mombasa, Kenya. A jeep packed with explosives smashed into a hotel lobby, just minutes after a large group of Israelis had left. Two Israeli boys were killed, along with their 61-year-old Israeli tour guide and 10 Kenyans. Minutes before the hotel bombing, two Strela missiles were fired and narrowly missed an Israeli charter plane departing from Mombasa's airport.
APTN
Paradise Hotel, Kikambala, Near Mombasa - November 29, 2002
Various of explosion site
Close up burnt out car
Kenyan President Daniel Arap Moi walking round site of the explosion
Two rocket launchers being unveiled
SOUNDBITE (English) Daniel Arap Moi, Kenyan President
"I want to tell you Western people, don't welcome anybody as a friend - there are no friends, accept those who love you. Kenya's government is going to pursue it. I cannot say much, but we'll do the best we can."
APTN
Kikambala, Near Mombasa - November 29, 2002
Three dancers in hotel lobby before attack (these three women were all killed), pan round to show Noy an Dvir Anter, two Israeli boys who were killed, with their father Rami Anter (in black and white top), who survived
Fire visible from round corner of building
Smoke rising
Injured person being carried
People wrapping bandages round wounded man's eyes
11:23:07
End