10 July 2005.
A police vehicle enters the scene as forensic experts gather near the remains of the number 30 bus in Tavistock Square London Sunday July 10, 2005, which was blown up by a bomb in the series of terrorist attacks in central London last Thursday morning. Police suggested Sunday that the death toll may not go higher than the 49 already confirmed. There has been confusion about how many bodies remained in the train hit deep underground between King's Cross and Russell Square.(AP Photo) |
An injured man is helped outside a Baghdad, Iraq hospital after he was injured in a suicide bombing outside an Iraqi army recruiting center in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, July 10, 2005. A suicide bomber blew himself up killing at least 14 and injuring more than 40. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein) |
Police motor bikes escort vehicles being removed on trailers Sunday, July 10, 2005 from London's, Travistock Square where a double decker bus was ripped apart by a terrorist bomb during Thursday's bomb attacks. Police began their recovery operations short after midday removing surrounding cars and debris from the crime scene. Sunday, July 10, 2005. The death toll in the four bombings in London on Thursday was confirmed as 49. Police said it would inevitably rise above 50 as teams of police, forensic scientists and investigators remove bodies still in London's vast Underground transport system.(AP Photo/Sergio Dionisio) |
Removal trucks drive through a barrier at London's Travistock Square, Sunday, July 10, 2005, where a double decker bus was ripped apart by a terrorist bomb during Thursday's bomb attacks in London. Police began their recovery operations short after midday removing surrounding cars and debris from the crime scene. The death toll in the four bombings in London on Thursday was confirmed as 49. Police said it would inevitably rise above 50 as teams of police, forensic scientists and investigators remove bodies still in London's vast Underground transport system.(AP Photo/Sergio Dionisio) |
A Metropolitan Police officer views a bank of TV screens showing scenes around Whitehall in the Westminster city area of London, in the Central Command Complex at New Scotland Yard police headquarters on Saturday July 10 2005, where the police coordinated their efforts to deal with the terrorist attacks in the city on Thursday. (AP Photo / Rebecca Reid, National Pool) |
A police officer searches the grounds around St Pancras Parish Church for evidence after Thursday's bomb attacks in Tavistock Square, London, Sunday, July 10, 2005. Police began the recovery operations shortly after midday Sunday removing surrounding cars and debris from the square. (AP Photo/Sergio Dionisio ) |
Under an Iraqi election billboard, U.S. troops, Iraqi police and Iraqi military arrive on the scene of a suicide bombing outside an Iraqi army recruiting center in Baghdad, Iraq Sunday, July 10, 2005. A suicide bomber blew himself up killing at least 14 and injuring more than 40. The billboard reads, "God Is Great. We swear by the blood in our veins and the ink on our finger that we will not be defeated." (AP Photo/Alaa Al-Marjani) |
In this photo released by Greenpeace, a dive crew of which original skipper Pete Willcox was part of lowers a memorial sculpture onto the wreck of the ship while around 100 people gather on the Rainbow Warrior II and cast flowers on the water in Matauri Bay New Zealand, during the 20th anniversary of the bombing of the Rainbow Warrior I Sunday, July 10, 2005. In July 1985 Rainbow Warrior, campaigning for a "Nuclear Free Pacific," was readying to sail to protest at France's South Pacific nuclear test site of Muroroa Atoll when two French mines ripped apart its hull. Crewmen Fernando Pereira lost his life in the bombing that was carried out by French secret service agents.(AP Photo/Michael Amendolia/Greenpeace)**NO SALE NO ARCHIVE** Location MATAURI BAY, New Zealand Creation Date 07/10/2005 04:33:23 Submit Date 07/10/2005 03:16:57 |
9 July 2005.
Related NY Times report today on web hosting of London bombing photos:
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/08/technology/08blog.html
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** ALTERNATE CROP ** A picture released Saturday July 9, 2005 by the London Metropolitan Police shows the damage to the London Underground train which was involved in the terrorist attack at Aldgate tube station on Thursday. Police revised the timing of the deadly blasts that tore through the London Underground, saying on Saturday the explosions were detonated just seconds apart. (AP Photo/ Metropolitan Police) ** NO SALES ** |
This photo released by the London Metropolitan Police Saturday July 9, 2005 shows the London Underground train which was bombed at Aldgate tube station on Thursday July 7, 2005. Police revised the timing of the deadly blasts that tore through the London Underground, saying on Saturday the explosions were detonated just seconds apart. ( AP Photo/ Metropolitan Police ) ** NO SALES ** |
This photo released by the London Metropolitan Police Saturday July 9, 2005 shows the London Underground train which was bombed at Aldgate tube station on Thursday July 7, 2005. Police revised the timing of the deadly blasts that tore through the London Underground, saying on Saturday the explosions were detonated just seconds apart. ( AP Photo/ Metropolitan Police ) ** NO SALES ** |
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Italian Benedetta Ciaccia is seen in this undated family handout photo released Saturday July 9, 2005. Ciacci has reported as missing since the terrorist attack in London on Thursday July 7, 2005. ( AP Photo/Pa, HO ) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES ** |
A police officer stands on what remains of the top deck of the number 30 bus in Tavistock Square London Saturday July 9, 2005, which was blown up by a bomb in the series of terrorist attacks in central London last Thursday morning. Police revised the timing of the deadly blasts that tore through the London Underground, saying Saturday the explosions were detonated just seconds apart. (AP Photo/ Matthew Fearn, PA) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES ** |
** EDITORS AND ARCHIVIST PLEASE REMOVE LON125 OF JULY 8, 2005, SHOWING A DAMAGED CIRCLE LINE SUBWAY TRAIN, FROM ALL SYSTEMS AND ARCHIVES. THE SOURCE HAS WITHDRAWN PERMISSION TO USE THE PICTURE **Police and rescue workers by a bomb damaged Circle Line subway train stopped between Liverpool Street and Aldgate stations in London, Thursday, July 7, 2008. Police on Friday July 8, 2005, raised the death toll to more than 50 from London's terrorist bombings but said they hadn't yet been able to reach all of the dead. Commuters reluctantly returned to the Underground, but buses and subways carried fewer riders than normal in the aftermath of four rush-hour blasts. Sir Ian Blair, commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, said no evidence suggested that the attacks involved suicide bombers but that officials hadn't ruled out the possibility. He said a precise death toll wasn't yet known. (AP Photo/Takayuki Kawashima) Creation Date 07/08/2005 14:31:32 Submit Date 07/08/2005 13:53:16 Credit Associated Press TAKAYUKI KAWASHIMA Object Name ELIMINATION BRITAIN EXPLOSIONS Photographer TAKAYUKI KAWASHIMA Stringer Caption Writer RAJ**LON** Special Instructions IMAGE MADE AVAILABLE FRIDAY JULY 8, 2005 |
** EDITORS AND ARCHIVIST PLEASE REMOVE LON124 OF JULY 8, 2005, SHOWING A DAMAGED CIRCLE LINE SUBWAY TRAIN, FROM ALL SYSTEMS AND ARCHIVES. THE SOURCE HAS WITHDRAWN PERMISSION TO USE THE PICTURE ** A bomb damaged Circle Line subway train is seen stopped between Liverpool Street and Aldgate staions in London, Thursday, July 7, 2008. Police on Friday July 8, 2005, raised the death toll to more than 50 from London's terrorist bombings but said they hadn't yet been able to reach all of the dead. Commuters reluctantly returned to the Underground, but buses and subways carried fewer riders than normal in the aftermath of four rush-hour blasts. Sir Ian Blair, commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, said no evidence suggested that the attacks involved suicide bombers but that officials hadn't ruled out the possibility. He said a precise death toll wasn't yet known. (AP Photo/Takayuki Kawashima) Creation Date 07/08/2005 14:39:46 Submit Date 07/08/2005 13:53:16 Credit Associated Press TAKAYUKI KAWASHIMA Object Name ELIMINATION BRITAIN EXPLOSIONS Photographer TAKAYUKI KAWASHIMA Stringer Caption Writer RAJ**LON** Special Instructions Negative Number Image Number 8336900 (005BO) Trans reference Number LON124 |
A helicopter carrying British Prime Minister Tony Blair takes off from the G8 summit at the Gleneagles Hotel near Auchterarder, Scotland, Thursday, July 7, 2005. Blair left the G8 summit to return to London following the series of explosions that hit the capital on Thursday. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak) |
** EDITORS AND ARCHIVIST PLEASE REMOVE THIS PICTURE FROM ALL SYSTEMS AND ARCHIVES THE SOURCE HAS WITHDRAWN PERMISSION TO USE THE PICTURE ** Police and rescue workers by a bomb damaged Circle Line subway train stopped between Liverpool Street and Aldgate stations in London, Thursday, July 7, 2008. Police on Friday July 8, 2005, raised the death toll to more than 50 from London's terrorist bombings but said they hadn't yet been able to reach all of the dead. Commuters reluctantly returned to the Underground, but buses and subways carried fewer riders than normal in the aftermath of four rush-hour blasts. Sir Ian Blair, commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, said no evidence suggested that the attacks involved suicide bombers but that officials hadn't ruled out the possibility. He said a precise death toll wasn't yet known. (AP Photo/Takayuki Kawashima) |
8 July 2005.
High-resolution satellite photo of central London:
http://www.digitalglobe.com/images/qb/london_msi_july28_2002_dg.jpg (4.3MB)
Other London satellite images:
http://www.digitalglobe.com/london_gallery.html
| Photo captions by Associated Press. | |
** FILE ** 2003 file picture of a London tube train. Several people were injured Thursday July 7 2005 after explosions blamed on a power surge closed down the entire London Underground network. British Transport Police said power surge incidents, some of which caused explosions, occurred at Aldgate, Edgware Road, King's Cross, Old Street and Russell Square stations. A spokesman for the City of London Police said there were "quite a large number of casualties" at Aldgate Station. (AP Photo/PA). Creation Date 10/19/2003 09:26:06. Submit Date 07/07/2005 05:18:50. |
Emergency service work at Aldgate Tube Station after multiple explosions were reported in London, Thursday, July 7, 2005. Near simultaneous explosions rocked the London subway and three double-decker buses at the morning rush hour Thursday, police and news reports said, injuring some people and prompting officials to shut down the entire underground transport network. Some media reports said there were fatalities. (AP Photo / Sergio Dionisio) |
London Underground staff provide assistance to passengers prevented from entering the tube station at Victoria after the London Underground network was shut-down Thursday July 7, 2005, following explosions initially blamed on a power surge. Emergency services reported several injuries and Scotland Yard declared the emergency a "major incident". (AP Photo/Martin Keene, PA) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES ** |
** EDS ALTERNATIVE CROP LJRM105 ** Injured tube passengers are escorted away from Edgware Road Tube Station in London following an explosion, Thursday July 7, 2005. An explosion destroyed a double-decker bus in central London during rush hour Thursday, police said. Two other blasts also went off in other buses, reports said. There were reports of casualties. The explosion near Russell Square occurred not long after blasts on London subways earlier Thursday, police said. Dow Jones Newswires reported that police confirmed explosions on at least two others buses. One of the buses exploded near Russell Square, police said. A witness said the entire top deck of that bus was destroyed. (AP Photo/ Jane Mingay) |
Injured tube passengers are escorted away from Edgware Road Tube Station in London following an explosion, Thursday July 7, 2005. An explosion destroyed a double-decker bus in central London during rush hour Thursday, police said. Two other blasts also went off in other buses, reports said. The explosion near Russell Square occurred not long after blasts on London subways earlier Thursday, police said. Dow Jones Newswires reported that police confirmed explosions on at least two others buses. One of the buses exploded near Russell Square, police said. A witness said the entire top deck of that bus was destroyed. (AP Photo/ Jane Mingay) |
The scenes at Edgware Road Tube Station in London following an explosion, Thursday July 7, 2005. An explosion destroyed a double-decker bus in central London during rush hour Thursday, police said. Two other blasts also went off in other buses, reports said. There were reports of casualties. The explosion near Russell Square occurred not long after blasts on London subways earlier Thursday, police said. Dow Jones Newswires reported that police confirmed explosions on at least two others buses. One of the buses exploded near Russell Square, police said. A witness said the entire top deck of that bus was destroyed. (AP Photo/ Jane Mingay) |
Walking wounded leaving Edgware Road tube station in London, Thursday July 7, 2005 after an explosion. Half a dozen explosions rocked the London subway and tore open a packed double-decker bus during the morning rush hour Thursday, police said. At least two people were killed and nine injured in the nearly simultaneous blasts, and officials shut down the entire underground transport network. (AP Photo/Edmond Terakopian/PA) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES ** |
An aerial view of Edgware Road Tube Station in London following an explosion, Thursday July 7, 2005. Near simultaneous explosions rocked the London subway and three double-decker buses at the morning rush hour Thursday, police and news reports said, injuring some people and prompting officials to shut down the entire underground transport network. Some media reports said there were fatalities. (AP Photo/ Jane Mingay) |
Metropolitan Police officers search the contents of a dustbin, outside Aldgate East Tube station in east London Thursday July 7, 2005. Near simultaneous explosions rocked the London subway and three double-decker buses at the morning rush hour Thursday, police and news reports said, injuring some people and prompting officials to shut down the entire underground transport network. Some media reports said there were fatalities. (AP Photo / John Stillwell/PA) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES ** |
Walking wounded being treated at the London Hilton Metropole after the explosion at Edgware Road tube station in London, Thursday July 7, 2005. Near simultaneous explosions rocked the London subway and three double-decker buses at the morning rush hour Thursday, police and news reports said, injuring some people and prompting officials to shut down the entire underground transport network. Some media reports said there were fatalities. (AP Photo/Edmond Terakopian/PA) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES ** |
A firefighter walks through damaged cars scattered on the road with blood stains on the wall at Tavistock Square in central London Thursday, July 7, 2005. Near simultaneous explosions rocked the London subway and three double-decker buses at the morning rush hour Thursday, police and news reports said, injuring some people and prompting officials to shut down the entire underground transport network. (AP Photo/Sang Tan) |
Blood on the outside of the British Medical Association building, near a bus blast in central London Wednesday July 7, 2005, where the wall was splattered with blood to a height of around 15ft (4.5 metres) . More than 33 people have been killed in four blasts across the capital Thursday. (AP Photo/PA, Sean Dempsey) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES ** |
Seats on the upper deck of a London bus are seen open to the elements after the bus had its roof blown off in Eversholt Street, London, Thursday, July 7, 2005. Near simultaneous explosions rocked the London subway and a double-decker bus at the morning rush hour Thursday. (AP Photo/Sergio Dionisio) |
A wrecked double-decker London bus, with its roof blown off and debris strewn across the road after a blast in Russell Square in Central London Thursday July 7, 2005. Near simultaneous explosions rocked at least five London subway stations and ripped apart a double-decker bus at the morning rush hour Thursday, police said, causing at least two deaths, reportedly injuring at least 95 people and sending bloodied victims fleeing from debris-strewn blast sites. (AP Photo-Str) **UNITED KINGDOM OUT, NO SALES, NO INTERNET** |
The wreckage of a bus with its seats open to the elements and its roof blown off after an explosion in Eversholt Street, London, Thursday, July 7, 2005. Near simultaneous explosions rocked the London subway and a double-decker bus at the morning rush hour Thursday, police said, causing at least two deaths, reportedly injuring at least 95 people and sending bloodied victims fleeing from debris-strewn blast sites. (AP Photo/Sergio Dionisio) |
A newspaper stand announces the news outside a closed Leicester Square station in London, Thursday, July 7, 2005, after a series of explosions in the capital. Near simultaneous blasts on three subway trains and a red double-decker bus brought chaos to the streets of London Thursday. At least 40 people have been killed in the explosions in London, a U.S. law enforcement official says. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because British officials have yet to make public the death toll, but U.S. officials learned of the number from their British counterparts. (AP Photo/Edmond Terakopian/PA) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES ** |
Chris Randall from Bromley, who was injured when a bomb exploded on a train at Edgware Road underground station is treated at St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, Thursday July 7, 2005. Four blasts rocked the London subway and tore open a packed double-decker bus during the morning rush hour Thursday, sending bloodied victims fleeing in the worst attack on London since World War II. Three U.S. law enforcement officials said at least 40 people were killed and London hospitals reported more than 350 wounded in the terror attacks. (AP/Photo/PA Pool) |
Michael Henning, a city broker, leaves the Royal London Hospital in Whitechapel, central London Thursday July 7, 2005, where he was treated for cuts to his face from flying glass, after being injured in the Aldgate Tube station explosion. More than 33 people were killed in a series of terrorist blasts in London Thursday, police have said. (AP Photo/PA, John Stillwell) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES ** |
In this image provided by commuter Alexander Chadwick, taken on his mobile phone camera, passengers are evacuated from an underground train in a tunnel near Kings Cross station in London, Thursday, July 7, 2005. At least 33 people were killed Thursday in three explosions in London's subway system, a senior police official said. Deputy Assistant Commissioner Brian Paddick said others died in an explosion on a bus in central London but gave no figures. The second blast, at 8:56 a.m. (0756GMT), in the King's Cross area of north London, killed 21, Paddick said. (AP Photo / Alexander Chadwick) |
In this image provided by commuter Alexander Chadwick, taken on his mobile phone camera, passengers are evacuated from an underground train in a tunnel near Kings Cross station in London, Thursday, July 7, 2005. At least 33 people were killed Thursday in three explosions in London's subway system, a senior police official said. Deputy Assistant Commissioner Brian Paddick said others died in an explosion on a bus in central London but gave no figures. The second blast, at 8:56 a.m. (0756GMT), in the King's Cross area of north London, killed 21, Paddick said. (AP Photo / Alexander Chadwick) |
Police forensic experts at work in London's Tavistock Square after a bus was ripped apart by an explosion Thursday July 7, 2005. More than 33 people have been killed in four blasts across the capital Thursday. (AP Photo/PA, Sean Dempsey) ** UNITED KINGDOM OUT NO SALES ** |
Wrecked seats on the top of a double-decker London bus which was ripped apart by an explosion in Russell Square in central London, Thursday July 7, 2005. Four blasts rocked the London subway and tore open a packed double-decker bus during the morning rush hour Thursday, sending bloodied victims fleeing in the worst attack on London since World War II. Three U.S. law enforcement officials said at least 40 people were killed and London hospitals reported more than 350 wounded in the terror attacks. (AP Photo/Max Nash) |
Emergency services carry a woman into an ambulance at Kings Cross Train Station after multiple explosions rocked the capital in London, Thursday, July 7, 2005. A string of explosions rocked at least three London subway trains and ripped apart a double-decker bus during the morning rush hour Thursday. (AP Photo/Sergio Dionisio) |
Sniffer dogs stand on alert at an underground entrance in Paddington station in west London, the entrance is closed to all rush-hour commuters who have been turned away as the whole tube network has been closed down due to terror bomb explosions across London, Thursday July 7, 2005. Four explosions rocked the London subway and tore open a packed double-decker bus during the morning rush hour Thursday, sending bloodied victims fleeing in the worst attack on London since World War II, and causing transport chaos. The London Underground system was closed and no buses ran in the central zone for most of the day. (AP Photo/Jane Mingay) |
Police secure the area around a suspect bomb on board a bus in the middle of Edinburgh's Princes Street, Scotland, Thursday, July 7, 2005. Earlier in London a string of rush-hour explosions tore into at least three London subway trains and a double-decker bus on Thursday in the worst attack on London since World War II, killing at least 37 people and injuring 700. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison) |
Emily, left, and Katie Benton, of Knoxville, Tenn., are shown in photos from the 2001 Karns High School yearbook. The sisters were among the hundreds injured by a string of terrorist bombings Thursday morning, July 7, 2005, in London. Both are in a London hospital and were expected to recover, according to their father, Dudley Benton. The two young women were on vacation. (AP Photo/Knoxville News Sentinel) |
British police officers stand guard outside King's Cross Underground station that was hit by an explosion, in central London, late Thursday July 7, 2005. A string of rush-hour explosions tore into at least three London subway trains and a double-decker bus on Thursday in the worst attack on London since World War II, killing at least 37 people and injuring 700. Britain's foreign secretary said it had the hallmarks of al-Qaida. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis) |
A lone commuter sits in a carriage on an underground train on the Central Line during morning rush hour in London, Friday July 8, 2005. London commuters ventured warily back onto the capital's buses and subways Friday morning, but traffic appeared to be lighter than normal and many appeared to be staying home the day after bombers hit the transportation network on Thursday, killing at least 37. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham) |
Commuters travel on the top-deck of a bus during morning rush hour in London, Friday July 8, 2005. A series of deadly explosions in London on Thursday claimed at least 37 lives and injured hundreds of others. Britain's top law-enforcement official said Friday that the bombers who hit London's transportation network could strike again. Britain's Home Secretary Charles Clarke said police have not ruled out the possibility that one or more of the attackers who struck three subway trains and a double-decker bus on Thursday could have been suicide bombers. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham) |
Britain's Prime Minister Tony Blair, right, accompanied by an aide arrives back at the Gleneagles Hotel near Auchterader Scotland to return to the G8 Summit in the evening Thursday July 7, 2005. Earlier Thursday Blair left the G8 summit to go to London after the terrorist bombings in the captial.(AP Photo/Chris Young H.M Government HO) |
French President Jacques Chirac, center, listens to comments by Irish rock singers Bono, right, and Bob Geldof, left, during a meeting on the sidelines of the G8 Summit at Gleneagles in Auchterarder, Scotland, Friday July 8, 2005. World leaders, shaken by deadly bombings in London, were wrapping up an economic summit Friday with a major aid package for Africa and even a deal on climate change, despite continued bickering between the United States and its allies over global warming. Woman at rear is unidentified. (AP Photo/Michel Euler) |
Britain's Prince Charles The Prince of Wales at the opening of 'The Living Museum' at St James' Park to commemorate the end of the Second World War, in London, July 04, 2005, (Tim Graham Picture Library) *** Local Caption *** Prince Charles The Prince of Wales; Camilla Duchess of Cornwall. Creation Date 07/04/2005. Submit Date 07/07/2005 14:53:25. |