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(15 Mar 2003) Tokyo, Japan 1. Mid shot protest 2. Various wide shots protest 3. Mid shot of protest with anti war banner 4. Wide shot protest 5. Effigy of US president George W Bush's head 6. People holding signs: "Give peace a chance," then zoom in to sign 7. Protesters marching towards camera 8. Wide shot of protesters 9. Mid shot protesters with banners 10. Low shot of protesters Moscow, Russia 11. Man with loudhailer outside US embassy 12. Wide shot of protesters 13. Mid shot of young communists displaying anti-war placards 14. Protesters and a placard reading: "Stop US aggression against Iraq and the DPRK (North Korea)." 15. Wide shot of stage 16. Mid shot of audience 17. Pop musician performing 18. Audience waving flags Paris, France 19. Wide shot of march 20. Mid shot of large balloons 21. Mid shot of march 22. Various shots of protesters 23. Marchers with drums 24. Marchers walking towards the camera Brussels, Belgium 25. Wide aerial shot of protest 26. Various mid shots of protest 27. Mid shot of red flags 28. Wide shot of green flags 29. Mid shot green flags 30 Protest sign: "No war for oil" 31. Mid shot Palestinian and Iraqi flags 32. Child on adult's shoulders showing anti war signs, pan down to row of protesters 33. Sign reading: "Stop mad cowboy disease." (First Run 1500 GMT F-L-A-S-H -15 March 2003) Iskenderun, Turkey 34. Protesters carrying Turkish flag 35. Wide shot protest 36. Mid shot protest with "No to War" banner 37. Various mid shots of protest 38. Pan from grim reaper to man dressed as Ku Klux Klan with sign reading: "Bush" written on chest 39. Turkish Communist Party banner 40. Turkish Communist Party sign saying "Yankee go home" 41. Wide aerial shot of protest STORYLINE: France, Russia and Germany issued a joint declaration on Saturday saying there was no justification for a war on Iraq and that United Nations (UN) weapons inspections were working. The document said "the use of force can only be a last resort." It continued: "We solemnly call on all the members of the Council to do everything possible" for the peaceful disarmament of Iraq. The trio called for a foreign ministers' meeting at the UN Security Council on Tuesday to discuss a "realistic" timetable for Saddam Hussein to disarm. The meeting would follow the latest progress report due to be delivered by chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix. The statement comes as more than a hundred thousand people took to the streets around the world to voice their opposition to a war against Iraq. In Tokyo, about 10-thousand protesters, including many who lived through World War II which left Japan in ruins, chanted "No war". Some held up handmade placards with slogans such as "World Peace" and "Bush the terrorist". On Friday, Japan told the US it was trying to persuade nations on the United Nations (UN) Security Council to support a US-backed resolution ordering Iraq to disarm or face war. Japan is not a member of the Security Council but is a strong US ally. In Russia, two large anti-war rallies took place in Moscow. A communist-led demonstration marched from Smolenskaya Square to the US embassy where several hundred protesters waved red flags. Anti-American sentiment ran high at the rally, with protesters holding placards and chanting that the real threat of international terror came from the US. Patriotic groups also gathered in Puskinskaya Square, in a demonstration arranged by Pavel Borodin, who was a senior aide to former Russian president Boris Yeltsin. Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork Twitter: / ap_archive Facebook: / aparchives Instagram: / apnews You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/you...