(19 Jan 2006)
Peshawar - January 19, 2006
1. Wide shot of anti-US protest in Peshawar with chanting slogan
2. Wide of rally with effigy of Bush being driven on car (suit jacket with cardboard head that reads "Bush")
3. Various of rally
4. Mid shot of black suit jacket purported to be an effigy of Bush, sign reads: (Urdu) "Bush is a dog."
5. Various of crowd chanting slogans
6. Mid shot of crowd burning black suit jacket with sign above reading "bush"
7. Wide pan of crowd
8. Wide man addressing crowd
9. Wide of sign reading "Bush is a dog"
Islamabad - 19 January, 2006
10. Set up shot of Sheikh Rashid, Information Minister
11. Close-up of hands
12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Sheikh Rashid, Information minister
We have reports and information that day when there was a strike that there a few, some three to five foreigners who have been killed, and the militants took away their bodies,so it is difficult to identify who they were (audio glitch). So we are investigating and we and our security agents are investigating, and the process of the investigation, and so far the investigation is on, so we are not in a position to confirm any death."
Peshawar - January 19, 2006
13. Wide of protest
STORYLINE:
Thousands took to the streets in Pakistan on Thursday to protest against the deadly US missile attack on Pakistani territory last week.
Protestors marched through the streets of Peshawar, denouncing the US and President George W. Bush.
An effigy of the US president was a paraded with a sign that read, "Bush is a dog".
Earlier in the day, Pakistan's prime minister said in a report published Thursday that there was a "communications gap" with the United States in regard to the US missile strike that killed at least 13 locals and four or five suspected members of al-Qaida.
Despite last week's airstrike on a remote village near the border with Afghanistan - which sparked protests across Pakistan - Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz said his country's alliance with the US to combat terrorism remains viable.
Pakistani security officials said an al-Qaida explosives and chemical weapons expert and a relative of the terror network's No. 2 leader were among four top operatives believed killed in the strike.
Speaking in Islamabad, Pakistan's Information Minister, Sheikh Rashid said the investigation is still ongoing.
Pakistani authorities have said four or five foreign militants were killed in last Friday's attack in Damadola, a village near the Afghan border.
Officials say the airstrike targeted - but missed - al-Qaida No. 2 leader Ayman al-Zawahri.
It also killed at least 13 local civilians, outraging many in the Muslim nation.
Find out more about AP Archive: [ Ссылка ]
Twitter: [ Ссылка ]
Facebook: [ Ссылка ]
Instagram: [ Ссылка ]
You can license this story through AP Archive: [ Ссылка ]
Ещё видео!