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(5 Mar 2004) 1. US tanks rolling down street 2. Various of US marines 3. US Marine on ground with gun, pan to Marine running to tank. 4. US Marine standing in front of burnt out bus 5. US Marine standing as Haitians walk past 6. US tank reversing off corrugated-iron sheeting 7. US Marines pulling barricades off road 8. US Marine standing guard as crowds watch 9. Various of Haitian crowds 10. US Marine tipping cold water over his head 11. US Marine running down street, calling to others 12. Various shots of tanks on patrol 13. Children clapping and chanting, holding up t-shirt of former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide 14. Various shots of Marines at tanks 15. Tanks rolling down street 16. People scrubbing graffiti off door 17. Exterior of looted Haiti Terminal (port) 18. Rear of looted truck 19. Bags lying on ground 20. Wide shot of rear of truck 21. Merchant making mobile phone call 22. SOUNDBITE (English) Vox Pop, merchant: "He said there was nothing happened to it, but I passed here this morning, they were still looting. And I don't see anything left, I don't see anything left. I don't even know where the container is." 23. Wide shot of people walking among cargo containers 24. SOUNDBITE (English) Bob Clement, Former Congressman from Tennessee: "He has made it very clear you know. He supports non violence." 25. SOUNDBITE (English) Guy Philippe, rebel leader: "It's too bad that international community want to give a message, they want to call us rebel leader(s). We (are) not rebel leader(s) we're just patriots we love our country. We were willing to give our blood for the country to find better conditions of living for people, that's why we were fighting for. I personally was not fighting for Presidency or Prime Minister. We could have taken the power when we entered the capital. We had the force and people with us, we haven't done it because we were fighting for democracy." 26. Wide shot of Philippe, Bob Clement and Dr. K. A. Evans, founder & director of Global Peace Initiative 27. Cutaway of reporter writing notes STORYLINE: US Marines and other peacekeepers patrolled the streets of the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince on Thursday, drawing some smiles and some hostility but no resistance. The rolled up in eight Light Armoured Vehicles near the looted port area pointing their machine guns and rifles down streets and toward the market. Crowds of onlookers gathered around, curious and showing no fear. But not everyone was happy. As the convoy passed an angry knot of people, one youth shouted: "You took our president - now you're taking our country!" Other passers-by held up photographs of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who fled the country on Sunday as rebels reached near the outskirts of the capital, and the US and former colonial ruler France pressed him to leave office. Rebel leader Guy Philippe said his men will disarm one month after the start of the rebellion. On Thursday Philippe had changed his military clothes for civilian ones. He told The Associated Press he did not want to be known as a rebel leader but as a patriot. He says he has given the order to his forces to disarm, and said their weapons were "in the bases" around Haiti. 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...