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King Charles leads nation in two-minute silence during Remembrance Sunday service at Cenotaph
King Charles III led a two-minute silence and wreath-laying with 10,000 veterans marching, honoring sacrifices from World War I through recent conflicts, officials said.
- King Charles III led a two-minute silence at the Cenotaph in central London to honor those who died in conflict during the Remembrance Sunday service.
- Around 10,000 armed forces veterans and 20 World War Two veterans took part in the Royal British Legion's march-past.
- The event also reflected on the discrimination faced by LGBT personnel in the armed forces, marking 25 years since the end of the ban on gay people serving.
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By JILL LAWLESS LONDON (AP) — King Charles III led Britain's annual Memorial Day ceremony Sunday under the November sun and the shadow cast over Europe by the conflict in Ukraine nearly four years after it began. As Big Ben tolled 11 a.m. from the Houses of Parliament, thousands of military personnel, veterans, and members of the public gathered in central London for two minutes of silence, broken only by a single artillery shot and bugles from …
·Hartford, United States
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Total News Sources28
Leaning Left5Leaning Right3Center12Last UpdatedBias Distribution60% Center
Bias Distribution
- 60% of the sources are Center
60% Center
L 25%
C 60%
15%
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