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LONDON, July 10 (Xinhuanet) -- Britain marks its
national commemoration day Sunday to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the end
of the World War Two, with thousands of people gathering turned out to say their
"Thank you" to those who have served and fallen in the war.
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| Britain marks its national commemoration day Sunday to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the end of the World War Two, with thousands of people gathering turned out to say their "Thank you" to those who have served and fallen in the war. (Photo: Xinhua/AFP) | The commemoration started with the
Queen Elizabeth II laying a bouquet of flowers at a memorial in the forecourt of
the Westminster Abbey to all innocent people who have laid their livesin wars.
The Queen was then joined by Prime Minister Tony
Blair, and heads of the opposition parties as well as hundreds of war veterans
for a memorial service at the Westminster Abbey.
Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, told
the congregation that the service was a "fitting response" to the terrorists
bombings in London on Thursday which claimed dozens of lives.
Following the service, the Queen attended a veterans'
lunch at Buckingham Palace.
A Parade of Standards took place in the Mall in
central London and a two-minute of silence observed to remember those giving
their lives to the country.
In her address to the nation, the Queen hailed the "unremitting
hardship and sacrifice" made by those who have served for the
country during the six years of the Second World War, adding the national
commemoration day is "an act of honor" shown to the veterans and their families.
Meanwhile, a fly-past of Second World War aircraft
Lancaster Bomber dropped one million poppies over Whitehall to mark the
countless lives lost in the war.
The event is part of a weekend of remembrance for
fallen Second World War heroes.
On Saturday the Queen unveiled a memorial in London to commemorate the sacrifices made by millions of women during the Second World War. One thousand war veterans attended the commemorations. Enditem
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