7/7 ten years on: a nation remembers

aldgate

On 7 July 2005, four suicide bombers launched an attack on London’s transport system that killed 52 and injured over 750 in the worst ever terrorist attack on British soil. 

Many Londoners woke up that day delighted with the news that they had won the bid to stage the Olympic Games – but that joy soon turned to horror when 52 people died and hundreds more injured in a series of coordinated attacks on the Tube and a double-decker bus at the height of the rush hour.

7-July-bombings

Three bombs went off on the Underground within minutes of each other just after 8.50am, two of them near Liverpool Street and Edgware Road stations, and a third between King’s Cross and Russell Square. An hour later a number 30 bus was hit on Tavistock Square, near King’s Cross.

Tomorrow, the tenth anniversary of the atrocity will be marked across the country:

A Service of Remembrance at St Paul’s Cathedral

The service will be broadcast from 10.30am , as families of those affected attend a commemoration service. Representatives of the emergency services will also attend the service alongside politicians, including Lord Mayor of London Boris Johnson. Prince Andrew will represent the Royal Family.

A minute’s silence

People across the UK will fall quiet for a minute at 11.30am to reflect on the anniversary of the attacks. In London, bus drivers will pull over if they can do so safely and although tube trains will continue running, announcements will stop and passengers will be reminded of the silence.

Tavistock_Square_bus1

 

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davepickering

Edinburgh reporter and photographer