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00:00:01The following program contains strong images of real-life injury
00:00:05and scenes which some viewers may find distressing.
00:00:25I've always thought, you know, I could do more with my life.
00:00:29Life can't just mean staying here in Beeston, you know, get married,
00:00:34have a couple of kiddies, have a little shop and that's it.
00:00:36Life has to mean more than this.
00:00:47Before we went to Pakistan, we were all close.
00:00:52Me, Shazad, Sadiq and Haseeb.
00:00:55We were going to go to Pakistan, learn and ultimately you fight if you've got the chance.
00:01:04Britain, America, they're the aggressors.
00:01:10We always wanted to go to Afghanistan from foreign occupiers.
00:01:13That was the ultimate aim.
00:01:14But the plan's changed.
00:01:15I love the brothers.
00:01:16But if I believed that what they did was right, do you actually think that I'd be sat here?
00:01:20On 7th of July, I would've been with the brothers and I would've had a rucksack and I would've had a rucksack
00:01:26and I would've killed hundreds of hundreds of people.
00:01:33But the plan's changed.
00:01:38I love the brothers, but if I believed that what they did was right,
00:01:41do you actually think that I'd be sat here?
00:01:46On 7th of July, I would have been with the brothers,
00:01:49and I would have had a rucksack, and I would have killed hundreds of people.
00:01:54You couldn't stop them. You could have definitely not have stopped me.
00:02:03There have been a series of terrorist attacks in London.
00:02:17This is the biggest crime scene in English history.
00:02:22So far, all the evidence, the coordinated explosions, points to Al-Qaeda.
00:02:26How did four young British men end up becoming suicide bombers in their own country?
00:02:35What makes a person do such a thing?
00:02:37I could do such a thing.
00:03:07It's difficult to really believe what has happened has happened and happened to you.
00:03:21But it happened to you and you've got to cope with it.
00:03:32Take me back to early 2000s.
00:03:35Who were you? What were you doing? What brought you to London?
00:03:39Well, I'd always worked in London, mainly worked in the city most of my life.
00:03:45I was working as an insurance broker of Lloyds of London.
00:03:50My hopes was to enjoy my life, quite simply.
00:03:59That morning was just a normal start to the day.
00:04:03The only complication was that my girlfriend and I had fallen out a little bit.
00:04:09Whilst I was leaving for work, it was still playing on her mind.
00:04:13She was a strong character and just before I closed the front door, she shouted out, don't die on the way to work.
00:04:21I like to think I followed her instructions to the letter.
00:04:25Good morning and you're watching Sunrise Live on Sky News on Thursday July 7th.
00:04:31We're live in Stratford where London is coming to terms with its status as the host city of the 2012 Olympic Games.
00:04:37The other big story today, the G8 Summit, gets underway here at Glen Eagles.
00:04:49I think we have to go on fighting terrorism as long as it takes.
00:04:55What happened on the 11th of September was, of course, a brutal and horrific attack on America.
00:05:02But it was a demonstration of what these people are capable of in any part of the world.
00:05:14What happened on the 11th of September was, of course, a brutal and horrific attack on the 11th of September.
00:05:35Before 9-11, Muslims were just a mystery.
00:05:38The only thing people knew about Muslims in the UK was that they don't like Salman Rushdie and something about not eating pork.
00:05:45I mean, that was pretty much it.
00:05:48The feeling is you're tolerated, not accepted.
00:05:51And so I wanted to make things easier, especially for, like, kids from my background.
00:05:57I was working a lot of social enterprise, not-for-profit charity sector.
00:06:01And I was asked as a volunteer to be, like, a government advisor.
00:06:05You know, like, what do the youth of today want to do?
00:06:09And so I was on the way from Hackney to Westminster.
00:06:13Missed the train, thought, oh, God, I'm going to be late.
00:06:16And five minutes later, a train pulls up, and that's never happened before.
00:06:19There's always 15 minutes, like, oh, my God, I'm so lucky.
00:06:21Part of the joy I always found of travelling the tube was the variety of people.
00:06:35I just love watching them and thinking, what is their life?
00:06:38What are they going to do today?
00:06:40What's involved for them?
00:06:42I had booked the day off and been working extremely hard,
00:06:51being part of the Olympics team, trying to get the Games to London.
00:06:57Lots of people thought London wouldn't win.
00:07:01So I had promised my son, who was three years old at the time,
00:07:07I'll spend a day with him.
00:07:09But we won.
00:07:12Games in 2012 are awarded to the city of London.
00:07:18The day of the announcement on the 6th of July, it was pandemonium.
00:07:24Somebody said to me, Thelma, you were jumping so high.
00:07:29It was the biggest achievement in my life to date.
00:07:35On the 7th of July, I decided I had to go into the office and start working.
00:07:42You're a workaholic.
00:07:44I think so, yes.
00:07:48Very good morning.
00:07:49Well, Tony Blair has been meeting George Bush this morning,
00:07:52the first of the bilaterals, ahead of a day which we'll see them concentrating
00:07:57mainly on this divisive issue of climate change.
00:08:01Obviously, we've discussed the issue of Iraq and Iran,
00:08:06the broader Middle East and so on, the normal range of issues you'd expect.
00:08:19I got to get to the top of theattack of Iraq and Iran.
00:08:20I think so.
00:08:21I got to get up here.
00:08:22I've got to get to the top of the hill.
00:08:23We got to get up here.
00:08:26We've got to get to the top of the hill.
00:08:28He's got to get up here.
00:08:30He's got to get up here.
00:08:32I got to get to the top of the hill.
00:08:34I think he was missing some of the new co-op,
00:08:36the new has been more difficult to do than Heya Park.
00:08:39You're going to get to the top of the hill.
00:08:41He was going to look for a six-year-old pack.
00:08:44On my head, I saw its way for a certain-year-old pack.
00:08:46Usually, like a commuter, you get on the same carriage.
00:08:56And I always used to travel the second carriage.
00:08:59They were all creatures of habit, I guess.
00:09:02So the circle line train comes in, and there was a lot of people coming on.
00:09:06And I just changed my mind and walked to the next set of doors at the front of the third carriage.
00:09:16We start out of Liverpool Street Station towards Allgate.
00:09:32I was only going two stops, so I was standing with my hand, grabbing the central rail.
00:09:40Fortunately, the carriage, there wasn't many people on this one.
00:09:43And I just stood holding on with one hand.
00:09:48Everything looked normal.
00:09:49The next thing I know is just a rushing sound across me.
00:10:17I was enveloped in this orange and yellow cloud.
00:10:24And I remember these silver zigzags across my vision.
00:10:30And your mind starts asking the question,
00:10:33What is this?
00:10:35And I asked that question three times, with increasing demand and firmness.
00:10:43And then I said to myself,
00:10:45It's a bomb.
00:10:46Just give me a second.
00:10:56It seems so real.
00:10:58But it's which is fine.
00:10:59Which is fine.
00:11:00You're reliving it now.
00:11:02Yeah.
00:11:03Which is fine.
00:11:04Which is absolutely fine.
00:11:05I've relived it so many times, so it's absolutely fine.
00:11:08But I may have to catch my breath occasionally.
00:11:14So I said to myself,
00:11:16Oh, that's not good.
00:11:17The next thing I knew,
00:11:22Everything was dark.
00:11:24I thought I'd died.
00:11:30There was no light.
00:11:31There was nothing.
00:11:33I put my hand to my face and I felt the blood.
00:11:36And I remember staring into the darkness like it was physically painful,
00:11:41I was staring so hard to just see a sign of life.
00:11:46But there was nothing.
00:11:47I felt as if I was lifted off the floor and I was going round and round and round in circles.
00:12:12I could hear people screaming, but it all seemed like a distance.
00:12:22All of a sudden, I opened my eyes and I was on the train tracks.
00:12:32Part of the door was on my right thigh.
00:12:38I could see people screaming on the train.
00:12:42And I could see bodies on the train track.
00:12:51I was in and out of consciousness.
00:12:55And there was a man with his hand on my head.
00:12:58And I took his hand off.
00:13:00I held him for a while, but I then put it back down next to him.
00:13:08I thought of my son and I thought of my mother.
00:13:12And I said, I don't want to die.
00:13:16I had no intentions to do no bombings.
00:13:23That's all I can say to you.
00:13:26I said, I don't want to die.
00:13:27I don't want to die.
00:13:28I don't want to die.
00:13:28I don't want to die.
00:13:30I don't want to die.
00:13:31I don't want to die.
00:13:31I don't want to die.
00:13:32I don't want to die.
00:13:33I don't want to die.
00:13:34We used to do Arabic classes together in the Islamic bookshop.
00:13:46From what goes to me, I've got a couple of videos,
00:13:48videos about brothers who are fighting in Chechnya
00:13:50and brothers who are fighting in Bosnia.
00:13:53As soon as I got the cassettes,
00:13:54I went back to my best friend Shezad's house here
00:13:56and gone to his bedroom when we put on the movies in it.
00:14:04We were showing people massacring the Muslims mercilessly
00:14:07and the whole world watched.
00:14:16But the Muslims were fighting back.
00:14:18The Mujahideen moved from the front line of the Al-Abuja
00:14:21near travelling to the mountains.
00:14:25It really brought a sense of brotherhood to a different level.
00:14:28You're getting Muslims from all around the world,
00:14:29Arabs, Pakistanis, Africans,
00:14:31going to a foreign land to help the Muslim lovers.
00:14:33I couldn't believe it.
00:14:35I thought, this is beautiful.
00:14:39It gave me a focus in life to help my Muslim brothers.
00:14:43On my bedroom wall,
00:14:45I used to have a lot of hip-hop stars like Tupac and Biggie,
00:14:48and then it all rapidly changed.
00:14:50I took them all down,
00:14:51put Kalashnikovs on my bedroom wall,
00:14:53loads of them.
00:14:57I can remember once,
00:14:58I was watching a movie with Shezad.
00:14:59I go to him.
00:15:00You know, one of these days, brother,
00:15:01I'm just going to go, you know?
00:15:04And then the next day,
00:15:05we were coming back from the evening prayer,
00:15:07and Shezad goes to me,
00:15:08you know that thing that we were talking about yesterday, yeah?
00:15:11I spoke with brother Sadiq,
00:15:13and Sadiq's going to Pakistan,
00:15:14and he wants to go to a training camp.
00:15:17Somebody's dropped out,
00:15:17so there's a place that you can take.
00:15:19Sadiq said everything would be sorted.
00:15:21There's no problem.
00:15:22Yeah, it's Andy.
00:15:36Hello, Andy, it's Nigel.
00:15:37Is it a technical explosion, or is it...
00:15:39No, no, no, no, a cable,
00:15:41a high-voltage cable went in the Liverpool Street area.
00:15:44Right.
00:15:45That's where it's caused a bang.
00:15:46Right.
00:15:47As is usual, when you have an explosion,
00:15:49when you have a train hit the tunnel,
00:15:50people hit an explosion.
00:15:51It is not an explosion.
00:15:52Right.
00:15:52Should we go to the morning?
00:16:20Describe to me what your main responsibilities were that day.
00:16:27On the day, yeah.
00:16:307th of July, we were all at King's Cross.
00:16:34That was our allocated station for the day.
00:16:39And we were just monitoring people going through.
00:16:46I'd worked my way around the main railway station.
00:16:49And I went down one level.
00:16:53Whilst I was there, there was this almighty,
00:16:58I can only sort of say it was like,
00:17:00crump, and the floor shook.
00:17:06I went down onto one platform,
00:17:09looked up the tunnel towards Russell Square.
00:17:12Their top third of the tunnel was full of smoke.
00:17:21Two people came down the track out of the tunnel,
00:17:25and they were covered in sort of like greasy residue.
00:17:29As I asked them, where have you come from?
00:17:34Their reply was, the train.
00:17:38The train blew up.
00:17:41The tunnel lights had come on.
00:17:50So that's an indication that there's no power to the tracks.
00:17:55I went up the tunnel.
00:17:57And I go into the train.
00:18:05There's a sense of fear from people.
00:18:07They don't know what to do.
00:18:10Mild sense of panic.
00:18:13Can you open your lock, please?
00:18:14Can you open your lock?
00:18:15We've started to get people off the train.
00:18:23I just worked my way through the train,
00:18:46and I come to a point,
00:18:48and I can see that the lights are out.
00:18:53The carriage door, it's a bit bent,
00:18:57and I start to push it as hard as I can.
00:19:01The first thing that I notice as I go into that carriage
00:19:05is the floor is sticky.
00:19:10There's body parts.
00:19:16There's body parts that I can see.
00:19:19I can hear someone asking for help,
00:19:26and it sounds like they're under that train.
00:19:37That's the point.
00:19:39I have to turn around
00:19:41and walk away.
00:19:44My responsibilities as the first officer on scene
00:19:48is to gather as much evidence
00:19:51and information that I can
00:19:53to help the bigger rescue effort.
00:19:56At six minutes past nine,
00:20:01I declared a major incident,
00:20:03and it's at that point
00:20:05a senior officer tells me
00:20:07I'm not the only incident.
00:20:11London has been attacked.
00:20:15Something's gone badly wrong down there.
00:20:17Three separate incidents.
00:20:19Three gear.
00:20:21Code for handling.
00:20:22Code number.
00:20:23Code number for the whole member.
00:20:25Code number for the whole network.
00:20:28We're going to stop the whole network.
00:20:29All right, do it now.
00:20:29Code number, get them into station,
00:20:31and then stand by.
00:20:32Yeah, that's all we're going to do.
00:20:50Breaking news we're getting from the PA Newswire
00:20:53that there's been reports of an explosion
00:20:55outside Liverpool Street Station.
00:20:58That, of course, in the east end of London.
00:21:01Another incident, London Underground detailing,
00:21:03is at Edgeware Road,
00:21:05and that, of course, is in northwest London.
00:21:07Now, in response to that breaking news,
00:21:09St Pancras has been evacuated,
00:21:11probably just as a precaution.
00:21:12Speculation only at the moment of what caused that,
00:21:16but police stressing that it probably was a power failure
00:21:19or a collision between two trains.
00:21:24We have six smokes coming from these tunnels.
00:21:27We have customers on the track.
00:21:29Will you please get as many ambulances as we can here
00:21:32to have this injury?
00:21:33I'll come back to everybody.
00:21:34Hey, we need ambulances and water to King's Cross.
00:21:37I understand what the name is.
00:21:38And Russell Square.
00:21:39We're going to have it as a major incident,
00:21:41so we'll get ambulances to you wherever I can.
00:21:43We're desperate scouts from both ends
00:21:46at Oldgate and Newer Road.
00:21:48They're still desperately waiting for emergency service.
00:21:51They're mostly located and declared
00:21:53they're on their way down there.
00:21:54We were sitting there for ages, waiting to be rescued.
00:22:08People were catatonic.
00:22:11They were just staring into the distance, silent.
00:22:18I was bleeding out.
00:22:20I thought I was going to die any minute,
00:22:23but I just determined that I was going to die above ground.
00:22:27I just wanted to see the light a day again.
00:22:37The lights in our carriage went out.
00:22:40The carriage in front of us started filling with smoke.
00:22:43Someone opened the carriage door and said,
00:22:44please, can you move down because we can't breathe in here.
00:22:47Then you start hearing the screams.
00:22:48At the time, we assumed that it was claustrophobic, folks.
00:22:54This is a very serious incident happening here.
00:22:58We need your cooperation.
00:22:59We're doing our best.
00:23:00We now need your help.
00:23:02We were stuck there for about 45 minutes.
00:23:04And then the first responders came,
00:23:06and so they beckoned us all to walk to the back of the train.
00:23:09Every now and again, someone would be screaming,
00:23:12move out of the way, so everyone would jump on the seats,
00:23:14and you'd see someone covered in blood.
00:23:15And that's when it was like, okay, what's happened?
00:23:19It doesn't make, you know...
00:23:21There must have been a fire or something must have, you know, happened.
00:23:24You just don't know.
00:23:25We stepped down to the track.
00:23:34I stopped and looked into the second carriage from the distance.
00:23:40There was a very clear crater just a few feet away of where the bomb must have been.
00:23:48I realised if I hadn't changed my mind and got on to the third carriage,
00:23:57yeah, I wouldn't be here.
00:23:59Getting a report from Reuters,
00:24:01what they're describing is a major incident on London Underground.
00:24:05People are streaming out of Oldgate tube station, covered in blood.
00:24:10Thank you, Jamie! Move back!
00:24:14That was fine, but I'm happy.
00:24:16Andrew, Andrew, move back!
00:24:17People have been coming out grey-facing.
00:24:23There's a chance they need to start doing it further back now, please.
00:24:26I was lying there and I thought,
00:24:41if there's a disaster, they're trying to save people who are alive first.
00:24:47And I thought, if I continue lying there, they might think I was dead.
00:24:50And I tried to wriggle my way to sort of get up.
00:24:57And I could see that my left foot was twisted backwards.
00:25:05And I kept saying, help me, help me, I'm alive.
00:25:09And then they came towards me and I was placed on a stretcher.
00:25:14I felt lucky, but then I was thinking of the other people
00:25:21who were lying on the train tracks.
00:25:25In particular, the man whose hand was on my head.
00:25:30I was so focused on helping myself that I didn't help him.
00:25:37And as a Christian, I thought that was selfishness.
00:25:41I was taken to the Royal London Hospital.
00:25:49And they took me upstairs to a ward.
00:25:53I just blacked out.
00:25:59As we got off the platform up the stairs of all gates at the entrance,
00:26:03all the police were there.
00:26:04And they're trying to take everyone's details down, like, it was a panic.
00:26:09And so they said, so what's your name?
00:26:11And I said, Mustafa, I was like, right, can we search your bag?
00:26:15And then after that, the police said, you can leave.
00:26:19And I just sat down and I just couldn't, I couldn't move.
00:26:24I started shivering again.
00:26:25I was like, you're kind of shocked.
00:26:29And then the police called us back from the coordinates
00:26:32because they could see that we weren't going anywhere.
00:26:35And they said, right, we're taking you to the hospital
00:26:36because you clearly, there's something wrong.
00:26:40And then they asked me again, so what's your name?
00:26:42I said, Mustafa.
00:26:43Okay, mate.
00:26:43So then they searched my bag again.
00:26:45And I was just like, yeah, just take it.
00:26:47Go, enjoy yourselves.
00:26:50Because you know how it is.
00:26:53It is what it is.
00:26:54We were evacuated across the road to Allgate bus station
00:27:12as the walking wounded.
00:27:14People are trying to take it all in.
00:27:20And has this really happened?
00:27:23The only way I could really see my injuries
00:27:25was to use my phone to take pictures of myself.
00:27:32I remember speaking to my girlfriend on the phone.
00:27:36And she was telling me it wasn't a bomb.
00:27:39It was power surges.
00:27:40Because that's what the news was saying.
00:27:44I think I very angrily said, no, it's a bomb.
00:27:54We flew from Manchester Airport into Van Islamabad.
00:27:59The same day, we went to Mancera.
00:28:02That's where the camp is.
00:28:10We were going to Kashmir.
00:28:18So eventually, if we wanted to fight,
00:28:20we would have gone and fought against the Indian occupation.
00:28:24In Kashmir, the Muslims are getting massacred
00:28:27by the Hindu soldiers.
00:28:27Pakistan's claim that this predominantly Muslim territory
00:28:35should have been ceded to Pakistan, not India,
00:28:39at the time of partition in 1947.
00:28:42Pakistan denies there are training camps,
00:28:45but even the militant supporters agree they exist.
00:28:48I know when we're going to the training camps and everything,
00:28:57in the eyes of this country,
00:28:58it might be classed as something that's wrong.
00:29:00But jihad and terrorism is worlds apart.
00:29:03People have to understand, you know,
00:29:05like it's different.
00:29:10I believe jihad is an obligation upon every male Muslim
00:29:14to help our Muslim brothers.
00:29:16In Islam, to protect your Muslim brother
00:29:18is regarded as something good.
00:29:29Rather than a power outage,
00:29:31as we're being told from London Transport,
00:29:33if there are people covered in blood
00:29:35and limbs in the carriage as a consequence of this,
00:29:38that would seem to imply a major explosion.
00:29:44I was driving down the M1 to my way into work,
00:29:53and I heard the first radio reports
00:29:55of incidents in the underground.
00:29:58I knew that one of them was in Edgway Road,
00:30:01so I made the decision to stop there
00:30:04and just see for myself what was going on.
00:30:07And it was apparent that this was something quite different
00:30:10to anything that we'd had to deal with in London before.
00:30:18The events of 11th of September 2001
00:30:23changed everyone's perception
00:30:24about what a terrorist attack could look like.
00:30:27Is your mind thinking, where's the fourth, where's the fifth?
00:30:34Yes, where's the fifth, where's the sixth?
00:30:37Are there going to be some in Birmingham, Manchester?
00:30:41I'm just standing on the street corner now.
00:30:43I look to my right, to my left.
00:30:45I can see a couple of hundred people
00:30:47all working out where they're going to go
00:30:49and how they're going to get to where they need to be.
00:30:52From my perspective,
00:30:54there is still this sense of
00:30:55what else might be about to happen.
00:30:58One minute minding your own business,
00:31:12bang, and we thought we were on fire.
00:31:14The smell, the smoke, you couldn't breathe,
00:31:16you couldn't see anything.
00:31:17It was horrible.
00:31:18I used to look at home.
00:31:19There was people screaming
00:31:21and there was people lying everywhere,
00:31:24covered in blood and bodies lying everywhere.
00:31:26Saw some limbs.
00:31:27Everyone was choking, thinking they were going to die.
00:31:31All hell's broken loose.
00:31:33We've had three explosions.
00:31:36The inspector sitting behind me just turned around to me.
00:31:38She says,
00:31:38Neville, make your way down
00:31:40to Wood Street Police Station as fast as you can.
00:31:49We were approaching the traffic lights
00:31:54at the junction of Tavistock Place
00:31:56and Upper Woburn Place.
00:31:59The number 30 bus going to Hackney Wick
00:32:01and was diverted down Tavistock Place
00:32:03was coming towards us.
00:32:06I think it drew level with the building I know very well,
00:32:09which is the British Medical Association building.
00:32:12We were about 120 yards from the bus.
00:32:19There was a very crisp, loud explosion.
00:32:41Human parts, a torso, a lot of debris coming out.
00:32:45There's only one thing I can do that,
00:32:47and that's a bomb.
00:32:49We can see people standing on the top deck.
00:32:55The priority is getting those that we can off the bus.
00:33:07There were injured people in there who were trapped.
00:33:10Oh, looking up, yeah, you could see up there as well
00:33:12was an absolute tangle mess of metal
00:33:16and individuals who were injured.
00:33:19Ladies and gents, please listen to me very carefully.
00:33:32I need you to move this way, please,
00:33:34as quick as you can, okay?
00:33:36As quick as you can.
00:33:37Any conjecture about what was going on beneath the ground
00:33:57couldn't have been answered in a more devastating way.
00:34:00It certainly bore the hallmarks of being an ALQ-type-inspired attack.
00:34:11But we had to establish exactly what had taken place,
00:34:15who was responsible in bringing them to justice.
00:34:18The Metropolitan Police Service has all of its anti-terrorist units here,
00:34:23and we are beginning a meticulous investigation.
00:34:28That's all I'm going to say at the moment.
00:34:29Can we do need to investigate it?
00:34:30There's some suggestion it could have been a suicide bomber.
00:34:32There's no reason to suggest that.
00:34:33There's no reason to deny that.
00:34:35It's just, you know, there is not enough information at this stage
00:34:38to make that a fact.
00:34:40We knew nothing, and so you're operating
00:34:43in a vacuum of accurate information.
00:34:47The feeling was that the key lay
00:34:49within the forensic examination of the scene.
00:34:59It's surprising what survives an explosion.
00:35:05There's always something that leads back
00:35:08to identify who the actual bomber was.
00:35:14I was dealing with the Tavistock Square bus.
00:35:19My focus is on the device itself,
00:35:23on the physics and the chemistry.
00:35:26What caused this to happen?
00:35:30I'm looking to find power supplies, switches, wires.
00:35:35I'm looking for plastic fragments from a lunchbox
00:35:41or fragments from a rucksack.
00:35:46It was not straightforward.
00:35:53We found fragments which appeared to originate
00:35:57from the rucksack that the device had been carried in.
00:36:01There were fragments of a battery.
00:36:05There were some wires.
00:36:07But there was no switch or the initiator to an explosive device.
00:36:12There was nothing like that.
00:36:14That was strange.
00:36:15When we were doing the examinations on the roof of the bus,
00:36:30there was a very apparent hole where a body had gone through.
00:36:33And there was one body that had been thrown out of the bus.
00:36:41It hit the side of the British Medical Association building
00:36:44and was lying on the pavement.
00:36:48Whoever it was had been very, very close to the bomb.
00:36:51The simplicity of the device and the lack of more complex components
00:37:00pointed to the individuals being the switches.
00:37:06Simply attaching the battery to the device,
00:37:09they initiated the explosion.
00:37:13We realised it was a suicide bomb.
00:37:15I wanted to help my Muslim brothers
00:37:28and I wanted to help liberate Muslim land.
00:37:33That's what I saw in my goal in life.
00:37:37There's about 100, 200 brothers.
00:37:40The brothers used to give us lessons in how to use a Kalashnikov.
00:37:43This man for the Kalashnikov RPG,
00:37:45just basic weaponry.
00:37:47We got to shoot loads.
00:37:58It's a proper beautiful scenery
00:38:00because you're proper high up
00:38:01and the mountain that we stayed on was very, very high
00:38:04and you can see all of Kashmir.
00:38:05It's absolutely breathtaking.
00:38:08Me and Sadiq used to love it.
00:38:12But as soon as we come back from Pakistan,
00:38:13boom, boom,
00:38:17watching our planes going down, 9-11.
00:38:239-11 was a big shock.
00:38:25The use of suicide operation is strictly forbidden in Islam.
00:38:30If you kill innocent people, it's like killing all of mankind.
00:38:32But Sadiq would explain to me why he thinks it's a good idea.
00:38:38He'd say it's good because of this and that.
00:38:41He'd give some, like, evidences from history and everything
00:38:43and I couldn't really understand him, yeah?
00:38:45Sadiq's very...
00:38:47He's one of them people, you know,
00:38:50it's his way or the highway.
00:38:53Like, if he said something, he meant it.
00:38:55If you're just tuning our way,
00:38:59it is coming up to a quarter to midday.
00:39:01On the day, it appears, the capital has come under attack.
00:39:05A group calling itself a secret organisation,
00:39:08Al-Qaeda in Europe,
00:39:09has posted, apparently,
00:39:11a claim of responsibility for the blast in London.
00:39:13The group claimed the explosions were in retaliation
00:39:16for Britain's involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan.
00:39:19Of course, that is not confirmed.
00:39:21We condemn utterly these barbaric attacks.
00:39:25We are united in our resolve
00:39:28to confront and defeat this terrorism
00:39:32that is not an attack on one nation,
00:39:37but on all nations
00:39:38and on civilised people everywhere.
00:39:42We send our profound condolences
00:39:45to the victims and their families.
00:39:50Mr Jeremy, thank you.
00:39:51Four explosions, brutally timed for maximum impact.
00:39:55Here's what we know so far...
00:39:57I've been in an off-site meeting in a hotel.
00:40:00There were some tellies and news feeds
00:40:02and we saw what was happening in London.
00:40:04Passengers on trains and stations...
00:40:06I said to somebody,
00:40:07oh, my son's gone down to London today.
00:40:09And she said to me,
00:40:11are you worried?
00:40:12And I said, no.
00:40:13David had just started a contract
00:40:17of working for somebody.
00:40:18He had to go to London for some meetings.
00:40:22The chances of winning the lottery
00:40:24are one in 13 million, I think it is.
00:40:27The chances of a lad from Oldham
00:40:28going to London on his own,
00:40:30the first time he gets on the tube,
00:40:32being caught up in this,
00:40:33are infinitesimally, incalculably small.
00:40:35So, no, I'm not worried.
00:40:37It was mayhem and then the driver
00:40:39came out of the carriage and...
00:40:41which was quite scary
00:40:42because he shone a red light
00:40:43and we all thought it was...
00:40:44I just thought, well, I thought I was dead.
00:40:47A woman clearly in deep shock
00:40:49after what she has experienced...
00:40:5112.40, I switched my phone on
00:40:55and the very first message said,
00:40:58oh, just to tell you, Graeme,
00:40:59that David didn't arrive for his meeting,
00:41:01I phoned the police.
00:41:04And I remember he was on the circle line.
00:41:06I think he's probably just forgotten
00:41:07to get off at the right stop
00:41:09and he's going round and round on the tube,
00:41:11hoping to find somewhere to get off.
00:41:13So I ignored that message, frankly.
00:41:15I phoned my wife, Janet,
00:41:19and she said, yes, I've just seen it as well.
00:41:22We'd been trying to phone him, of course,
00:41:24but we couldn't get through to him
00:41:26or even leave a message
00:41:27so that he could call us back.
00:41:29We were just trying to keep calm,
00:41:31thinking, no, this is something
00:41:33that happens to other people.
00:41:34It's not something that happens to us.
00:41:36No, no, we're sound.
00:41:37We're OK, we're OK.
00:41:39Put the telly on.
00:41:41And, of course, we're northern,
00:41:42so we had a cup of tea
00:41:43and we watched the news feed.
00:41:45But I think it's worth emphasising
00:41:47that whoever has done this,
00:41:49a group or individuals,
00:41:51are clearly not known
00:41:52because the assumption must be
00:41:54that all of those who've been watched
00:41:56by the security service
00:41:57were under surveillance yesterday and this morning,
00:42:01so they must be looking at individuals
00:42:03or a group that they weren't aware of.
00:42:10Negative thoughts were going round and round,
00:42:13in my head.
00:42:15My son, Haseeb, was missing in the city.
00:42:20I do not remember how many times I called him,
00:42:23but there was no answer.
00:42:26My wife watched the news with me.
00:42:39I cannot describe what was going on
00:42:41through our minds.
00:42:43The only thing we knew was that
00:42:45Haseeb went to London
00:42:46with his friends sightseeing.
00:42:48The police had no idea
00:42:59about Haseeb's whereabouts,
00:43:00but wrote down his details,
00:43:03his height, weight, and so on.
00:43:06I felt powerless,
00:43:10but I was praying for him.
00:43:13I feared the worst.
00:43:15All major roads and traffic leaks
00:43:27are disrupted for the foreseeable future.
00:43:31Make an alternative arrangement
00:43:33and go home.
00:43:35Tens of thousands tramping home tonight
00:43:38on foot across the capital.
00:43:40The underground system shut down.
00:43:42Liverpool Street,
00:43:43Kings Cross and Edgeware tube stations
00:43:45are crime scenes
00:43:46and will be shut for the foreseeable future.
00:43:48There are no buses.
00:43:51There are no taxis.
00:43:56I was still trying to process
00:43:58what happened on that train
00:43:59in the dark underground
00:44:01and who could do such a horrible thing.
00:44:06They gave me an eye patch
00:44:08and I was discharged from the hospital.
00:44:12As we walk outside,
00:44:14I'm conscious that people
00:44:15are taking pictures of me.
00:44:16And then I'm stopped
00:44:19by some reporters.
00:44:21I thought I wasn't going to get out of this.
00:44:23Whatever it was,
00:44:24I didn't know.
00:44:25I just didn't...
00:44:26I thought that was it
00:44:26when it went all so dark.
00:44:28You could hear the screaming
00:44:29coming from the carriage
00:44:30just in front of us.
00:44:31He took the full blast.
00:44:32Quite frankly,
00:44:33I'd lost track
00:44:33of how many interviews I'd given.
00:44:36But I was aware
00:44:36that this transport system was down
00:44:38and I was thinking
00:44:39of how I'm going to get home
00:44:40to West London.
00:44:43And two producers said to me,
00:44:45we can give you a lift home.
00:44:48And they said
00:44:49they'd been filming
00:44:50at the East London Mosque,
00:44:52which is right next to the hospital.
00:44:54And their car was there.
00:44:57At which point
00:44:58we were joined
00:44:58by two young boys.
00:45:00Follow up the news.
00:45:01All channels.
00:45:04One, two, five, three, two.
00:45:05You're lucky, man.
00:45:06I'm a very lucky man.
00:45:07Yeah, you're lucky.
00:45:08Wait, gosh.
00:45:09How long were you there for?
00:45:11About 25 minutes.
00:45:13Did you have to walk
00:45:14through the tunnel?
00:45:14Yeah, we walked through the tunnel
00:45:15and came up to all go.
00:45:17I'm walking somewhere around here.
00:45:21When we got to the mosque,
00:45:23they said they've invited you in for tea.
00:45:26And I thought,
00:45:26that's a good idea.
00:45:27Let's go in.
00:45:29May I offer you a cup of tea?
00:45:31I have one brewing, actually.
00:45:33Thank you very much.
00:45:35And then when I turned around,
00:45:36there was a line of young men,
00:45:38late teens, early 20s.
00:45:40And they all shook my hand
00:45:41and said how sorry they were.
00:45:44How did you feel in the train
00:45:45when you were bombed?
00:45:47I didn't feel the pain,
00:45:49the physical pain,
00:45:50to start with.
00:45:51I just remember being turned,
00:45:53twisted,
00:45:54not knowing what was happening
00:45:55and pushed down onto the ground.
00:45:57There was just so much glass.
00:45:59I was surprised
00:46:00there's loads still in the pocket.
00:46:06I can't believe I got a handful of glass
00:46:09out in front of those children
00:46:10at the mosque.
00:46:11But I was pulling out my skull
00:46:14for years afterwards
00:46:16to work more around.
00:46:23You hope that it's not Muslims
00:46:24responsible for it.
00:46:26You hope.
00:46:27Because you know what's coming next.
00:46:30You know you're going to be blamed for it.
00:46:369-11 changed everything.
00:46:38A target was on us after that.
00:46:39Like I know so many instances
00:46:41of friends will be like
00:46:42working in the supermarket
00:46:43and people go up to them
00:46:44and you should be ashamed
00:46:45of yourself for what happened.
00:46:47Like how do we have any connection
00:46:48to like what happens on 9-11?
00:46:51Society looks at communities
00:46:52as these homogenous groups,
00:46:54right?
00:46:54The Muslim community.
00:46:55But what a Macedonian goes through
00:46:58is different from what someone
00:46:59from Afghanistan goes through.
00:47:00Just by nature of politics
00:47:02or like folks in Chechnya.
00:47:05Do you know what I mean?
00:47:05It's so, so different.
00:47:07But you know,
00:47:08it's easier to just say
00:47:11they're Muslims.
00:47:14Around about lunchtime
00:47:15we got home from the hospital
00:47:16and because I'd spoken
00:47:17to some journalists
00:47:18my number was being passed around
00:47:20by a lot of newspapers
00:47:21and so I was getting
00:47:22constantly called.
00:47:26So I'd be on the phone
00:47:27with one journalist
00:47:28and in that time
00:47:29I'd get 15 missed voice calls.
00:47:30This goes on for 12 minutes.
00:47:50It's like a young Muslim
00:47:52who's willing to talk about it.
00:47:54The demographic is more likely
00:47:55to be radicalised.
00:47:57Why didn't it happen to you?
00:47:58Why is it happening?
00:47:59Are you like that as well?
00:48:01Are you the Trojan horse?
00:48:03You know, it's just the same
00:48:04crap over and over again.
00:48:07Why are you talking today?
00:48:09There is kind of a religious
00:48:11obligation that I have to be here.
00:48:13Like there is, in Islam
00:48:15you have to speak out
00:48:16against the tyrant.
00:48:18The tyrant is the terrorist
00:48:20who claims to represent Islam.
00:48:21The tyrant is the politician
00:48:23who wants to label
00:48:24all Muslims as one.
00:48:25The tyrant is the journalist
00:48:26who wants me to apologise
00:48:28for someone else's crime.
00:48:30The tyrant is the one
00:48:31who tells the lies.
00:48:33The one who's actually
00:48:34killing the people.
00:48:35That's the tyrant.
00:48:37And I have to speak truth.
00:48:40Otherwise I'm held accountable
00:48:41for norm.
00:48:41At the end of the day,
00:49:04I had to be forensically stripped
00:49:06so all my clothing
00:49:09was taken off me.
00:49:12I had to go home
00:49:13in a paper suit.
00:49:15It's difficult to see
00:49:27such injury
00:49:31and carnage
00:49:32knowing
00:49:34you've got to walk away from it.
00:49:39it's hard to tell people
00:49:43unless you've been there.
00:49:50I've never walked away
00:49:51from anybody
00:49:52who needed help
00:49:53but on that day
00:49:55I had to.
00:49:56I had to.
00:50:02I had to walk away.
00:50:04Otherwise more would have died.
00:50:07That would have been more people
00:50:08perhaps that I would have had
00:50:11on my conscience.
00:50:16So.
00:50:16I had to walk away.
00:50:47How I was treated
00:50:48in the mosque
00:50:49was really uplifting
00:50:51to just
00:50:52know that people
00:50:54it's not their fault.
00:50:57There's always been extremists.
00:50:59There's always been people
00:51:00who don't represent
00:51:01a particular thing.
00:51:02They don't represent
00:51:03the main body of people
00:51:04who are decent people.
00:51:09We live in a world
00:51:10where people take
00:51:11a minimum of information
00:51:13and suddenly they've
00:51:14formed a very strong opinion.
00:51:16without understanding
00:51:18the psychology
00:51:20why people do things
00:51:23why they're caught up.
00:51:27And most people
00:51:28aren't evil.
00:51:30That's just
00:51:30the construct we make.
00:51:33Most people
00:51:34I like to think
00:51:35are good.
00:51:38Compared to what I've seen
00:51:40it's not bad
00:51:40I can assure you.
00:51:41OK, yeah,
00:51:43we'll see you there then.
00:51:44OK, bye.
00:51:48But it wasn't lost on me
00:51:50that people
00:51:50wouldn't be making
00:51:51that journey home
00:51:52to their loved ones.
00:51:54President George Bush
00:52:19said that America
00:52:21would back Britain
00:52:22every inch of the way
00:52:23and would be right
00:52:23behind Britain
00:52:24hunting down
00:52:26and trying to capture
00:52:27the people responsible
00:52:29for today's attacks.
00:52:31I appreciate
00:52:32Prime Minister Blair's
00:52:33determination.
00:52:36The war on terror
00:52:36goes on.
00:52:39As we watched the news
00:52:41the fear
00:52:42was starting to win
00:52:43the battle
00:52:43against staying calm
00:52:45and staying sensible.
00:52:48There was a phone number
00:52:50an emergency phone line
00:52:51that kept coming up
00:52:52on the screen.
00:52:55So we phoned them.
00:52:58They simply said
00:53:00name, age
00:53:01and here's
00:53:02the reference number.
00:53:03I think the very first
00:53:04reference number
00:53:05they gave us
00:53:05was N353.
00:53:07We didn't go to bed
00:53:10that night
00:53:10we just watched
00:53:11telly constantly
00:53:12and we were phoning
00:53:13this emergency number
00:53:14and phoning
00:53:15and phoning
00:53:15and you just went
00:53:16through to a different
00:53:17person who just gave
00:53:18you a different
00:53:19reference number.
00:53:20So we ended up
00:53:20with dozens of
00:53:21different reference numbers.
00:53:24Today's outrage
00:53:25unfolded on another
00:53:26ordinary morning
00:53:28as millions
00:53:29travelled to work
00:53:30or school.
00:53:30It happened over
00:53:31the course of 56 minutes.
00:53:32There was no warning
00:53:34given though
00:53:35there's growing
00:53:35speculation that
00:53:36Al-Qaeda was
00:53:37responsible.
00:53:38The Queen has
00:53:39offered her sympathy
00:53:39to all those
00:53:40affected.
00:53:41At this point
00:53:42we know
00:53:42that there are
00:53:43more than
00:53:4450 fatalities.
00:53:46There were
00:53:47700 casualties
00:53:49and as far as
00:53:50we know
00:53:5122 are in
00:53:52serious and
00:53:53critical conditions
00:53:54in hospital.
00:53:57We saw
00:53:57on the news
00:53:58that a significant
00:53:59number of people
00:54:00who were in
00:54:01intensive care
00:54:01are unconscious
00:54:02and who had
00:54:03yet to be
00:54:04identified.
00:54:06So that gave
00:54:07us some hope.
00:54:09We were
00:54:10hanging on
00:54:11to the theory
00:54:11that, well
00:54:12there's a saying
00:54:13isn't there
00:54:14that no news
00:54:15is good news
00:54:16and that was
00:54:17our glimmer of
00:54:18hope that one
00:54:19of these unconscious
00:54:20unidentified people
00:54:21was David.
00:54:31Good morning,
00:54:36thanks for joining
00:54:37us.
00:54:37It is nearly
00:54:3824 hours
00:54:39since a series
00:54:39of bombs
00:54:40were set off
00:54:41on London's
00:54:41public transport
00:54:42system.
00:54:44The motivation
00:54:45for the attacks
00:54:46isn't yet clear
00:54:47but Tony Blair
00:54:48blamed terrorists
00:54:49acting in the name
00:54:50of Islam.
00:54:59Many years ago
00:55:00family liaison
00:55:01officers were
00:55:02known as the
00:55:02Fluffy Bunny
00:55:03Brigade.
00:55:06Tea and sympathy,
00:55:08you know,
00:55:08pat on the back
00:55:08kind of thing.
00:55:12We were assigned
00:55:14to deal with
00:55:15people who were
00:55:16involved in tragedies,
00:55:18usually deaths.
00:55:20Families are
00:55:21multifaceted,
00:55:22you don't know
00:55:22what you're going
00:55:23into and yes
00:55:24you're dealing
00:55:24with grief
00:55:25and people react
00:55:26very differently
00:55:27to grief.
00:55:28You have to
00:55:29expect the
00:55:30unexpected.
00:55:43I was informed
00:55:44that a youth
00:55:45from Beeston
00:55:47was reported
00:55:48missing,
00:55:50Haseeb Hussein.
00:55:53He was 18 years
00:55:54old,
00:55:55he'd gone down
00:55:56to London
00:55:56with some friends
00:55:57and they couldn't
00:55:58get in touch
00:55:58with him.
00:56:05White area.
00:56:08Nothing's changed
00:56:08here really,
00:56:09has it?
00:56:12It looks exactly
00:56:13the same as it
00:56:13did 20 years ago.
00:56:15I have butterflies
00:56:26in my tummy
00:56:27and I feel
00:56:28a bit nauseous
00:56:29but I guess
00:56:30it's just a feeling
00:56:31of revisiting
00:56:33a bad time
00:56:35in your past,
00:56:36isn't it?
00:56:36I was met by
00:56:42Mr Hussein
00:56:43at the door.
00:56:44His other son
00:56:45was in.
00:56:47His wife was out.
00:56:50It was a very nice,
00:56:51neat house.
00:56:53The news was on
00:56:54the television.
00:56:55So it's probably
00:56:55within 10 feet
00:56:56of where the blast was.
00:56:58Mr Hussein was
00:56:59concerned,
00:57:01anxious.
00:57:01He told me
00:57:03that his son
00:57:04Hasib
00:57:05had gone to London
00:57:06on Wednesday
00:57:07with some friends.
00:57:09He didn't know
00:57:09anything about
00:57:10where,
00:57:11when,
00:57:12why
00:57:12or what he was
00:57:13doing down there.
00:57:15I asked if I could
00:57:16have a photograph
00:57:16of him
00:57:17which he gave me.
00:57:21Mr Hussein
00:57:22said to me
00:57:23he had gone
00:57:24round the mosques
00:57:25looking for
00:57:26Hasib
00:57:27and what he did
00:57:29discover was
00:57:30that one of the
00:57:30friends he'd gone
00:57:31with was also
00:57:32missing.
00:57:34Somebody called
00:57:35Shahzad Tanvir
00:57:36and Mr Hussein
00:57:39didn't know
00:57:39this was a friend
00:57:40of his son's.
00:57:45The liaison officer
00:57:46came to see us
00:57:47as she asked
00:57:49about Hasib's
00:57:50religion.
00:57:51I told the liaison
00:57:53officer
00:57:53Hasib was an
00:57:55ordinary Muslim boy
00:57:56a son whom
00:57:58we were all proud.
00:58:00Before she left
00:58:02it felt like
00:58:03she had made
00:58:04certain assumptions.
00:58:06I thought
00:58:07they'd found
00:58:09Hasib guilty
00:58:10of something.
00:58:11I did not like
00:58:13it at all.
00:58:16It was apparent
00:58:17to me that
00:58:17Hasib's father
00:58:18didn't know much
00:58:19about his outside
00:58:20activities,
00:58:21where he went,
00:58:22who he saw,
00:58:22what circles
00:58:23he mixed in.
00:58:24but his other
00:58:26son never said
00:58:27much.
00:58:29I felt he had
00:58:30something to say
00:58:31but couldn't say
00:58:31it in front of
00:58:32his father.
00:58:34I just felt
00:58:35something in my
00:58:37bones.
00:58:40Said goodbyes
00:58:41and left.
00:58:42The morning rush hour
00:58:49in London
00:58:49saw large numbers
00:58:51of people
00:58:51heading into work.
00:58:55Many found
00:58:56their usual
00:58:57routes were barred.
00:58:58Even as they
00:58:59tried to carry
00:59:00on as normal,
00:59:01it was of course
00:59:02obvious
00:59:02this was no
00:59:03ordinary day.
00:59:04although we know
00:59:10that the four
00:59:11bombers are dead,
00:59:13we had to be
00:59:14absolutely certain
00:59:15that they weren't
00:59:17part of a larger
00:59:18network that were
00:59:19going to carry out
00:59:20another attack.
00:59:24On the 8th of July,
00:59:26the first major
00:59:28breakthrough,
00:59:28identity documents
00:59:33of an individual
00:59:34is found
00:59:35at two different
00:59:36bomb scenes.
00:59:38So you start
00:59:39putting together
00:59:40a picture
00:59:41that here's
00:59:42one of the
00:59:43individuals
00:59:43who may have
00:59:44been involved,
00:59:46Mohammed
00:59:46Sadiq Khan.
00:59:47After his
00:59:58daughter was born,
00:59:59Sid invited all
01:00:00the brothers to
01:00:00come to his
01:00:01house.
01:00:05We've got your
01:00:06uncles in the
01:00:06room,
01:00:08so I'll go and
01:00:08introduce you to
01:00:09them shortly.
01:00:12It's your uncle.
01:00:17He would regard
01:00:18us as uncles
01:00:18to his daughter.
01:00:23That's me.
01:00:28Thank you,
01:00:28brother.
01:00:30Sadiq seems to
01:00:31have made friends
01:00:31with him.
01:00:32There's Mr. Palwaan,
01:00:34two-year-old.
01:00:39There's Mr. Pious
01:00:40that ate everything.
01:00:42We were calling
01:00:43Shazad Pious.
01:00:45He never used
01:00:45to like it.
01:00:47He was really
01:00:50religious from
01:00:51even a young age.
01:00:52From about 14, 15,
01:00:54he started growing
01:00:54his beard and
01:00:54everything.
01:00:56We're finally
01:00:57chilling out
01:00:57with your chaps.
01:00:59We don't want
01:01:00that in.
01:01:05We used to
01:01:05chat about 9-11.
01:01:08What the Americans
01:01:09did is equally as
01:01:09wrong.
01:01:10They went on
01:01:10indiscriminately
01:01:11bombed everything
01:01:12that moved.
01:01:13Every nation
01:01:14now has a
01:01:15decision to make.
01:01:16either you
01:01:18are with us
01:01:18or you
01:01:20are with
01:01:20the terrorists.
01:01:29American
01:01:30and the
01:01:30coalition forces,
01:01:30they went
01:01:31and invaded.
01:01:32It was like a
01:01:33snowball effect
01:01:34from Kashmir
01:01:35to Afghanistan.
01:01:38Me and the
01:01:39brothers,
01:01:39our ultimate aim
01:01:40was the same,
01:01:41fighting against
01:01:42occupation.
01:01:542004 was a
01:01:55completely
01:01:56different ballgame.
01:01:58The plan
01:01:59seemed to have
01:02:00changed.
01:02:02Sadiq goes,
01:02:03me and Shazad,
01:02:04we're going to go
01:02:05back to England
01:02:05and we're going
01:02:07to go do
01:02:07something.
01:02:08A couple of
01:02:09things for the
01:02:09brothers.
01:02:10He said,
01:02:11keep away,
01:02:12bro.
01:02:20I did feel
01:02:21really left
01:02:22out and sad.
01:02:24But I thought,
01:02:25whatever they want
01:02:25to do,
01:02:26let them do,
01:02:26innit?
01:02:26I have to do
01:02:37this thing for
01:02:39the whole future.
01:02:40I got a phone
01:02:41call and then
01:02:42the world
01:02:44sort of exploded.
01:02:46Armed officers
01:02:47surround a house
01:02:48preparing for a raid.
01:02:50I just couldn't
01:02:50believe what
01:02:51I'd walked into.
01:02:52I was like,
01:02:53right,
01:02:53we really need
01:02:54to get out of here
01:02:54right now.
01:02:56I just feel
01:02:56that something's
01:02:57gone totally wrong
01:02:58for that guy
01:02:59to have been involved
01:03:00because he was
01:03:01a really nice guy.
01:03:02We are at war
01:03:03and I am a soldier.
01:03:05Now you too
01:03:05will taste the
01:03:06reality of this
01:03:07situation.
01:03:25If you have been
01:03:41affected by any
01:03:42of the issues
01:03:43raised in this
01:03:44program,
01:03:45help is available
01:03:45online at
01:03:46sky.com forward
01:03:47slash viewer support.
01:03:49And you
01:03:53will see you
01:03:55the
01:03:57same
01:03:58way.
01:03:59This is the
01:04:00thing.
01:04:00This is a
01:04:01scenario.
01:04:01You
01:04:02have a
01:04:03sea
01:04:03وفrle,
01:04:03the
01:04:04ship.
01:04:05It's
01:04:05all
01:04:05but it's
01:04:06the
01:04:07way.
01:04:07We
01:04:07have a
01:04:08great
01:04:08place.
01:04:08This is our
01:04:09world.
01:04:09If you
01:04:09have
01:04:10комментарising
01:04:10our
01:04:10investment

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