(12 Jun 2011) SHOTLIST NB: NO SLATE ++AUDIO AS INCOMING++ 1. Wide top shot of blast scene 2. Various of damage caused by explosions 3. Mid of resident Amin Khan and other resident talking, with scene in background ++PART MUTE++ 4. SOUNDBITE: (Urdu) Amin Khan, resident, VOX POP: "The situation is very bad here nowadays and everybody is afraid. It's very difficult to stay here in Peshawar and the situation of Khyber Pakhtoon Khawa is more than worse and many people migrate from here." 5. Mid of shoes from blast victims on ground 6. SOUNDBITE: (Urdu) Aquil Yousafzai, businessman, VOX POP: "We don't know who is doing this and what for. We don't know who we are fighting against, who is killing our kids, who is destroying our army and police. And no-one knows how long it will go on. We don't know what the members (Government) who are here are doing." 7. Cutaway of Urdu newspaper, featuring blasts 8. SOUNDBITE: (Urdu) Aquil Yousafzai, businessman, VOX POP: "It affects the whole of society, kids are not ready to go to school, they can't read, they are crying about going to school, they have the fear of bomb blasts. We are all thinking about whether we will go back to our houses or not." 9. Various of people reading newspapers 10. SOUNDBITE: (Pashto) Fazal e Qadar, businessman, VOX POP: "Yes, there is fear about all this as kids and innocent people are dying in it and nobody knows who is behind all this. A muslim cannot harm other muslims in this way, the situation is very bad, no-one can go out for his business, kids can't go to schools, people can't go to their offices, everybody has a fear." 11. Cutaway of Urdu newspapers 12. SOUNDBITE: (Pashto) Fazal e Qadar, businessman, VOX POP: "It's all about the government policies and it is the duty of the government to control all of this. The ordinary people, like me, we can't do anything, it's all about the politics." 13. Various of closed shops in sadar (bazaar) 14. Close of locks STORYLINE: Residents in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar were examining on Sunday the damage caused by two explosions that went off earlier in the morning, leaving 34 people dead and nearly 100 others injured. The blasts went off minutes apart on Sunday, one of the deadliest attacks since the US raid that killed Osama bin Laden last month, according to officials. The blasts, one of which was caused by a suicide bomber, occurred just after midnight in an area of the city that is home to political offices and army housing. "We don't know who is doing this and what for. We don't know who we are fighting against, who is killing our kids, who is destroying our army and police. And no-one knows how long it will go on," said local businessman Aquil Yousafzai. The attack took place as CIA (US Central Intelligence Agency) Director Leon Panetta and Afghan President Hamid Karzai visited Islamabad, 95 miles (150 kilometres) to the east, to speak separately with senior Pakistani officials about intelligence sharing and efforts to reconcile with the Taliban. The first explosion was relatively small and drew police and rescue workers to the site, said a senior local police official. A large explosion rocked the area a few minutes later, causing the fatalities and injuring 98 people, 18 critically, said a senior doctor at a local hospital. The second blast was caused by a suicide bomber riding a motorcycle packed with 22 pounds (10 kilograms) of explosives, said a senior police official. The source of the first explosion was unknown. 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...