(15 Feb 2003)
1. Wide overhead shot of march
2. People dressed as British Prime Minister Tony Blair and and US President George W. Bush kissing
3. Choir singing
4. Tilt down from neon advertising to man conducting choir
5. Banners in march
6. Pan from protestors dancing to people playing instruments
7. Wide shot of march with man dancing on stilts in the foreground
8. Horses
9. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin) Vox pop
"I don't want to see any war in the world, that's why I'm here."
10. Protestors walking away
11. SOUNDBITE (Portuguese) Flavio Ravara, Human Shield (Brazil)
"As human shields we are carrying out a kind of direct action, a kind of peaceful protest against the war in Iraq, against the expansion and redrawing of the world map by American imperialism and Zionism. So I'm going as a volunteer to Baghdad, to try to stop this genocidal and absurd war."
12. Child on shoulders in crowd
13. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Ana Lopez, Protestor (Argentina)
"I'm surprised that there's so many people of (different) ages, families with children, a lot of young people and I think it's fantastic that the people take action."
14. Protestors dressed as weapons inspectors, with puppet dressed as Bush
15. Man with mannequin's legs on his head
16. SOUNDBITE (English) Arrun Kapoor, (from New York, US)
"I think the anti-protest movement is growing bigger and bigger in the (United) States, so hopefully. (Question: And why have you got legs on your head?) Because it's love not war." (laughs)
17. Pakistani protestors with banner (Democratic Revolutionary Party)
18. SOUNDBITE (English) Mohamed Aslam Tawakli (From Pakistan), Leader, Democratic Revolutionary Party
"The whole world is saying no war, because they are, innocent people are going to get killed and people going to get killed just for oil, not for any other reason. Instead of Iraq they should go to sort the matter of the Palestine, not Iraq. Iraq haven't done anything to anybody."
11. People walking in crowds
STORYLINE:
A million people marched in London on Saturday against war in Iraq, thought to be the largest-ever march in Britain.
The protest brought together people from all sections of society, as well as a wide range of nationalities in the cosmopolitan city.
Twin processions converged in the capital's Piccadilly Circus and then went on to Hyde Park, where speakers at a rally included Bianca Jagger, Reverend Jesse Jackson and Hollywood actor Tim Robbins.
Organisers said the huge turnout was a warning to British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Blair has been the strongest supporter in Europe for US President George W. Bush's aggressive policy toward Iraq.
The march was organized by the Stop the War Coalition, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and the Muslim Association of Britain.
Whistles and horns blared from the streams of marchers, whose banners showed the breadth of opposition: socialists, environmentalists, trade unions, churches and the eccentric.
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