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Rare tape that captured Sep 11 attack accidentally
Sunday, September 7 2003 11:56 Hrs (IST)
New York: The only videotape known to have recorded both planes slamming into twin towers of the
World Trade Centre and the only second image of its kind showing the first strike has surfaced publicly
almost two years after the terrorist attacks brought down the New York landmark.
The only other videotape showing first plane hitting one of the towers came from a French crew who was
making a documentary about fire-fighters.
The footage, which just surfaced was shot by a Czech immigrant construction worker Pavel Hlava who
knows little English and has now been obtained by the 'New York Times'.
The immigrant's son came very near erasing the recording at one point of time but the father took the
video camera away in nick of time.
One of the reasons for tape not surfacing so long was that the immigrant was not sure what to do with it
though he knew he had recorded the most deadly event in the United
States.
The federal investigators who are studying the collapse of the towers say that they are now trying to
obtain a copy for the data it may contain. A lack of information on the first strike, for example, has posed
a major challenge to engineers trying to understand exactly why the north tower crumbled.
The tape could, for example, help investigators pin down the precise speed at which the first plane was
moving when it struck the tower.
Reporting the acquisition of tape, the 'New York Times' said the car carrying Hlva was making a video to
be sent home when he captured the planes impacting the twin towers and at that time, he did not realise
the gravity of the incident.
It was not until almost two weeks later that he even realised that he had captured the first plane on video.
Even then, Hlava did not realise that he had some of the rarest footage collected of the World Trade
Centre disaster. His is the only videotape known to have recorded both planes on impact, the 'Times'
reported.
The tape - a kind of accidentally haunting artefact - has surfaced after following the most tortuous and
improbable of paths, from an insular circle of Czech-American working-class friends and drinking
buddies.
At one point, a friend of Hlava's wife traded a copy of the tape to another Czech immigrant for a bar tab
at a pub.
Hlava and his brother, Josef, who was also in the car on September 11 tried at various times to sell the
tape, both in New York and in the Czech Republic. But with little
sophistication about the news media and no understanding of the tape's significance, the bothers had
no success, the 'Times' said.
Eventually, a woman happened to learn of the tape from the pub deal at a school where one of the
Czech immigrants was studying English. She brought it to the attention of a freelance news
photographer who doubled as her ballroom dancing partner, and that man, Walter Karling, brought the
tape to 'The New York Times'.
PTI
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