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World remembers 9/11 attacks
New York -
President Bush and other top officials joined thousands gathering
across the country Sunday in tearful tributes, prayers and quiet
reflection on the eve of the fifth anniversary of the September 11
terrorist attacks.
In New York, the president and first
lady Laura Bush placed wreaths in pools of water where the World Trade
Center's twin towers stood before two commercial airliners toppled
them five years ago.
Other memorials were held in
Washington, where another hijacked passenger plane slammed into the
Pentagon, and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, where a fourth jet crashed
into a field.
An estimated 2,973 people were killed
in the attacks.
The death toll from the twin towers
was estimated at 2,749, including the 87 passengers aboard American
Airlines Flight 11 and the 60 on United Airlines Flight 175. Among the
dead were 60 police officers and 343 firefighters who responded to the
scene.
After the wreath-laying ceremony, the
president and first lady attended a service at Trinity Church, an
Episcopal church near ground zero.
"It's hard not to think about the
people who lost their lives on September the 11th, 2001," Bush said
after the service. "You know, you see the relatives of those who still
grieve, and I just wish there was some way we could make them whole.
So, tomorrow's going to be a day of sadness for a lot of people."
But it's also a day for affirming the
nation's fight against terrorists who would commit such acts against
the American people and its allies, he said.
"It's also a day of remembrance, and
I vowed that I'm never going to forget the lessons of that day," he
said. "And we spent time in there, looking at some of the horrific
scenes inside this fantastic place of healing, and it just reminded me
that there's still an enemy out there that would like to inflict the
same kind of damage again. And so tomorrow's also a day of renewing
resolve."
Earlier Sunday, New York Mayor
Michael Bloomberg attended the Fire Department's anniversary prayer
service at St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan to honor what he
called "shining lights" in the city's "darkest day."
"Let me promise you one thing: We
will not forget," Bloomberg said. "We will not succumb to terrorism,
and we will make sure we build a better city, a better country, and a
better world for freedom-loving peoples everywhere. May God bless you
all, the memories of those we've lost and may God continue to bless
New York City," he said.
In Washington, thousands of Americans
participated Sunday evening in the Freedom Walk, now in its second
year. They walked from the National Mall to the Pentagon's south
parking lot, next to the crash site.
Afterward, the Pentagon beamed 184
lights into the sky, one for each of the people who died in the U.S.
military headquarters when American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into
it. The lights will remain lit until Tuesday.
Hundreds of people also rode their
motorcycles Sunday in the third annual "Rattle the Runway" ride,
cruising to the Pentagon from the National Air and Space Museum's
building near Dulles International Airport.
Hundreds of people traveled to the
makeshift memorial in Shanksville, the rural Pennsylvania community
where United Flight 93 crashed. The president and first lady were
scheduled to go to Shanksville for another wreath-laying ceremony
Monday morning.
Other ceremonies scheduled Monday
include a moment of silence at ground zero at 8:46 a.m., the moment
Flight 11 slammed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center.
About 200 people will then read the
names of the victims, stopping only for the moments of silence at 9:03
a.m., when the South Tower was hit; 9:59 a.m., when the South Tower
fell; and then at 10:29 a.m., when the North Tower collapsed.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
and Vice President Dick Cheney are expected to attend a morning
ceremony at the Pentagon, where the president and Mrs. Bush will lay
another wreath after attending the Shanksville commemoration.
Cheney told NBC's "Meet the Press" on
Sunday that the United States has "stayed actively and aggressively
involved in the hunt for (al Qaeda leader Osama) bin Laden from the
very beginning," despite media reports that the task force assigned to
find him has been disbanded and reports that the trail has gone cold.
"He continues to be a top priority
today. That hasn't changed," Cheney said. "The president and I get
periodic reports on our efforts in that regard. There's been no
lessening of our interest or of our activity with that."
Now 49, the Saudi exile founded al
Qaeda in 1988 as an association of Islamic militants who had battled
the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.
Bin Laden and his associates have
released numerous videotapes since September 11, 2001, praising and
encouraging attacks on Western interests and lamenting the loss of its
leaders, many of whom have been killed or captured by U.S.-led troops.
On Sunday, messages posted on several
Web sites used by the terror network said a statement from bin Laden's
top lieutenant, Ayman al-Zawahiri, will be released "soon, God
willing."
Similar announcements have been
followed by statements posted on the Internet or broadcast by
Arabic-language networks like Al-Jazeera.
A videotape aired Thursday by Al-Jazeera
showed what was described as a meeting between bin Laden and Ramzi
Binalshibh, a key plotter in the September 11 attacks, making
preparations for the suicide hijackings. -- CNN News
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