UK commemorates 75th VE Day amid coronavirus pandemic

 | Updated: May 10, 2020, 12:00 AM IST

As UK continues to battle coronavirus pandemic, its citizens honoured the 75th Victory in Europe Day which marked the end World War II on the continent.

Let's take a look:

Britain

Following the surrender of Germany in World War Two, on 7 May 1945, Prime Minister Winston Churchill declared the following day a public holiday, Victory in Europe (VE) Day.

 
(Photograph:AFP)

Britain

Queen Elizabeth led tributes to veterans of World War Two recalling the "never give up, never despair" message of VE Day.

In a rare televised address that brought together the themes of wartime and the coronavirus, the 94-year-old monarch said those who had served during the conflict with Nazi Germany would admire how their descendants were coping with the lockdown imposed to curb the spread of the virus.

(Photograph:Reuters)

Britain

On a day that should have been filled with parades and street parties, the national commemorations to herald the day when Allied forces accepted Germany's unconditional surrender were scaled back after social gatherings were curbed to stop the spread of the coronavirus.

 

(Photograph:Reuters)

Britain

Flags and banners still fluttered across Britain, and people stuck at home due to the lockdown enjoyed a day of special television and radio programmes.

(Photograph:Reuters)
;

Britain

Britain paid tribute to the war generation with flypasts, a two-minute silence, and the broadcast of wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill’s speech to mark the anniversary of victory in Europe.

(Photograph:Reuters)

Britain

In a short ceremony that had been kept secret to avert the possibility of any crowds gathering, Prince Charles wearing a kilt laid a wreath at the war memorial outside his family’s Balmoral estate in Scotland.

(Photograph:Reuters)

Britain

Prime Minister Boris Johnson invoked the "heroism of countless ordinary people" in his tribute to the millions of Britons who fought and lived through the war.

(Photograph:Reuters)

Britain

Households across Britain evoked the spirit of the 1940s, some dressing in period costume and hosting tea parties despite the coronavirus lockdown.

(Photograph:Reuters)