From the BBC:
“Nation falls silent as King
leads Remembrance ceremony”
King Charles has led the nation
in two minutes of silence in remembrance of men and women who lost their lives
serving in the two world wars or other conflicts. Tens of thousands of veterans
and civilians joined the King in paying their respects to the fallen at the
annual National Service of Remembrance ceremony at the Cenotaph in central
London. The King was joined by other members of the Royal Family, including the
Prince and Princess of Wales, and political leaders. Events to mark Remembrance
Sunday - observed on the closest Sunday to Armistice Day - are taking place
around the country.
The King laid the first wreath on
behalf of the nation. Dressed in the Royal Navy uniform of the Admiral of the
Fleet, he saluted after stepping back from the Cenotaph. The King was followed
by Queen Camilla’s equerry, Major Ollie Plunket, laying a wreath on her behalf
as she is currently recovering from a chest infection. Prince William, Prince
Edward and Princess Anne followed, then Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and the
country's other political leaders.
Kemi Badenoch laid a wreath for
the first time, a week after being elected the new leader of the Conservatives.
There were also a number of representatives from the new Labour government,
including Home Secretary Yvette Cooper and Foreign Secretary David Lammy. The
Princess of Wales watched on from the balcony of the Foreign Office, as is
usual, alongside the Duchess of Edinburgh. The weekend's Remembrance events are
among the first official appearances for Catherine following her recent cancer
treatment.
Also watching from balconies were
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage and Green Party co-leader Carla Denyer. It is
tradition for only the heads of parties with six or more seats in Parliament
and the leaders of the largest party from each of the devolved nations to lay a
wreath. Members of the armed forces, including veterans of World War Two, then
laid their wreaths, before commencing a march down Whitehall which took more
than an hour to complete.
The thousands-strong group,
representing 326 different armed forces and civilian organisations, marched
past the Cenotaph. Each group had a wreath that was handed over to join those
that had already been placed. The day's commemoration had officially started at
11:00, when Big Ben chimed to signal the start of the two-minute silence. It
was ended by the sound of a cannon blasting from Horse Guards Parade, followed
by a bugler playing the Last Post.
"For me personally, I come
here to remember my shipmates, Army veterans, Royal Air Force and Merchant
Navy," said naval veteran Henry Rice., "I just thank God I survived -
I got away with it." Joe Randall, aged 101, said: "Your mind goes
back a bit as well, memories and talking to the old chaps like ourselves. It's
been a wonderful day." But most of the ex-servicemen and ex-service women
at the ceremony were veterans of more recent conflicts. Iraq war veteran Karl
Hinnett, who suffered severe burn injuries when his vehicle was set alight,
said: "Marching at the Cenotaph, it’s a really important moment to
appreciate where we've come from and what we've gone through." "We're
often referred to as the unexpected survivors and I'm just really grateful to
be alive and be here." Falklands bomb specialist veteran John Phillips,
who lost an arm in a blast, said he thinks about a colleague who did not
survive the explosion. “Many of the veterans will tell you it's very important
that these people are remembered forever and their stories will be told
forever." The march past featured veterans in their military association
groups alongside charities and civilian organisations. And among them were 50
young people wearing the yellow and black scarves of Scotty’s Little Soldiers,
a charity supporting the children of fallen service people. Cerie Pallett, who
lost her father RAF Sgt Oliver Pallett at the age of nine, carried the wreath
for the charity after her and sister were helped by them.
Services are being held in almost
every town and city across the UK - with some of the biggest gatherings in
Belfast, Edinburgh, Cardiff, Plymouth, Liverpool and Manchester. In Belfast,
Northern Ireland's First Minister Michelle O'Neill took part in the official
ceremony, making her the first senior Sinn Féin figure to do so. Several Sinn
Féin politicians have laid wreaths at the Cenotaph in Belfast in previous
years, but they have not previously attended the main Sunday ceremony. In
Cardiff, military personnel marched past the City Hall towards to the ceremony
at the Welsh National War Memorial in Cathays Park. First Minister Eluned
Morgan honoured the service of remembrance “as important as ever” in an address
before the service. Gatherings took place in Glasgow at the war memorial in
George Square, and Scottish First Minister John Swinney was joined by veterans
in laying a wreath at the Stone of Remembrance in Edinburgh outside the City
Chambers. He said it was a chance for generations of Scots to honour those who
"paid the ultimate price" in conflicts across the globe.
^ This was a good way to remember
the Veterans and the Dead. ^
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