Blind Veteran To Mark Remembrance Sunday Online
This year's Remembrance Sunday will be very different because of the coronavirus pandemic.
This year's Remembrance Sunday will be very different because of the coronavirus pandemic.
The Scottish First Minister has asked the public to take to their doorsteps at 11:00 on Remembrance Sunday to mark the two-minute silence.
Guidance on how Remembrance Sunday activities can be held have been published.
The public engagement in central London comes ahead of Armistice Day next week and one day before England enters a second national lockdown.
Personnel from across the Royal Navy have been specially selected to take part in the ceremony in central London.
A ban on communal worship during England's second lockdown means church services marking Remembrance Sunday are cancelled.
New Government guidance will see places of worship closed apart from limited activities such as funerals and individual prayer.
The majority of regional councils in England have been encouraging people to observe the traditional two-minute silence from home.
Previous years have seen a public service welcome veterans and families.
The four-and-a-half-mile route takes into account the history of both the 16 Air Assault Brigade and Colchester as a garrison town.
Due to COVID-19, a number of measures have been introduced, including cashless donations options.
Politicians, actors and veterans are among those supporting the 'Remember Together' initiative.
The newly-decorated crossing in Richmond is the only one of its kind in the UK and is outside The Poppy Factory.
The poppies cannot be sold to the general public because of the nature of the materials from which they are made.
BFBS Invites the Military Community to Participate in Its Virtual Act of Remembrance
The events have been moved online due to a ban on outdoor events across Scotland's central belt over COVID-19.