Special report:
5th anniversary of 9/11 terror
attacks
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U.S. President George W. Bush and first
lady Laura Bush lay a wreath into a reflecting pool at the site of the
World Trade Center in New York September 10, 2006, during a ceremony to
commemorate the fifth anniversary of the September 11, 2001
attacks.(Xinhua/AFP Photo) Photo Gallery
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WASHINGTON, Sept. 10
(Xinhua) -- U.S. President George W. Bush on Sunday left Washington for a series
of activities including tours of the three 9/11 attack sites in the next 24
hours to mark the catastrophic event occurred five years ago.
According to CNN Television, Bush attended a prayer
service at St. Paul's Chapel in New York, across the street from the Ground
Zero, where 2,749 died when the twin towers of the World Trade Center collapsed
after being hit by hijacked airliners.
Before that, the president laid a wreath and made a
few comments at Ground Zero.
On Monday, Bush will pay a visit to a New York
firehouse nicknamed "Fort Pitt" in the Lower East Side in honor of the first
responders who rushed into the towers.
He will have breakfast with firefighters, police
officers and Port Authority police and observe moments of silence to mark the
times when planes struck each tower.
Bush's next stop is Shanksville, Pennsylvania, where
40 people died when a plane slammed into the ground, and then the Pentagon, to
mark the deaths of 184 there, before returning to the White House for the
televised speech at the prime night time.
In the 9/11 anniversary of 2002, Bush also toured
each attack site, embracing family members of the victims and speaking at the
Pentagon and New York's Ellis Island.
Since then, he has kept a lower profile on the
anniversary.
As this year's anniversary falls less than two months before the midterm elections, Bush's tours of the attack sites are seen as a political move to remind Americans that his party is stronger in the issue of national security. Enditem