Londoners walk together to honor 7/7 terror attack victims
Commuters pay tribute on 10th anniversary of bombings
To mark the 10th anniversary of the 7/7 bombings in London, Tube commuters are walking together in honor of the terror attack victims.
And many are documenting their tributes on social media with the hashtag #walktogether, posting pictures of their feet.
7/7 bombings: Commuters #walktogether in memory of lives lost in terror attack - live http://t.co/E2kdAQgtTH pic.twitter.com/iSg3VrGERY
— The Telegraph (@Telegraph) July 7, 2015
#walktogether Never to forget the victims of the 7/7 bombings. pic.twitter.com/CH3DmkRT2C
— sharon addison (@sherriebobbins) July 7, 2015
I have my walking shoes on ready for #walktogether pic.twitter.com/U1DxtzTWjz
— Lauren O'Connor (@laurenoconnorPR) July 7, 2015
Still have the shoes I was wearing to walk 5 miles on 7/7. The blisters have gone, not the memories. #walktogether pic.twitter.com/Qg70sZuwte
— Andrew Dysch (@fing1992) July 7, 2015
Walking to my site #walktogether #LoveLondon pic.twitter.com/Z8mDbpmCyj
— Nic W (@niwise) July 7, 2015
Londoners walk together in unity #sevenseven pic.twitter.com/4GKy5C9q9X
— Steele's Village (@SteelesVillage) July 7, 2015
Londoners #walktogether to remember victims of the 7/7 bombingshttp://t.co/6Hpj53wOpO pic.twitter.com/MTczFaFrMR
— BuzzFeed UK (@BuzzFeedUK) July 7, 2015
Commuters urged to #walktogether in memory of the 7/7 victims http://t.co/MfOLTV6LYq pic.twitter.com/aGpc8dxorf
— The Independent (@Independent) July 7, 2015
Some got off their trains and buses a stop early to participate in the unity walk.
#walktogether Off one stop early to remember fellow Londoners & visitors whose train didn't pull in calmly 10 yrs ago pic.twitter.com/XZSWAVQIkU
— Matt Clare (@MattCElthamSth) July 7, 2015
On the 10th anniversary of the 7/7 atrocities I got off a few bus stops early to #WalkTogether & remember pic.twitter.com/uK4yp5LIQt
— Raymond Simonson (@FatSideburns) July 7, 2015
Walking Chancery Lane to Covent Garden in remembrance & unity on 7/7 #walktogether https://t.co/LZRoKZ5yBz
— Steve Ballinger (@steveballinger) July 7, 2015
The suicide bombings — carried out by four al-Qaida-affiliated Islamic extremists during the morning rush hour on July 7, 2005 — killed 52 people and injured more than 700 others in the worst terror attack in the United Kingdom since the 1988 Lockerbie bombing.
Remembering the victims of #sevenseven http://t.co/02494j4cGW pic.twitter.com/Qj2sLrRuPg
— BBC News (UK) (@BBCNews) July 7, 2015
Officials held a nationwide moment of silence Tuesday morning for the bombing victims.
The Army holds one minute's silence to remember the 52 people who died on 7 July 2005 #sevenseven pic.twitter.com/BMRp70CyG4
— British Army (@BritishArmy) July 7, 2015
Staff across the Brigade paused for a minute's silence today to remember those who lost their lives on #sevenseven. pic.twitter.com/UCFnMQlUM0
— London Fire Brigade (@LondonFire) July 7, 2015
Members of the public across the UK pay tribute to those in the #sevenseven bombingshttp://t.co/E2kdAQgtTH pic.twitter.com/QkKZDsoTar
— The Telegraph (@Telegraph) July 7, 2015
People gathered at the 7/7 memorial in Hyde Park for the minute's silence #sevenseven pic.twitter.com/tiFDfjkkOh
— Catherine Wylie (@wyliecatherine) July 7, 2015