Agencies/London

Queen Elizabeth II led millions of Britons as they fell silent to honour members of the Commonwealth’s armed forces killed in conflict at the annual Remembrance Sunday service.
The 89-year-old monarch, senior royals and politicians including Prime Minister David Cameron laid wreaths at the Cenotaph national war memorial in London, as thousands of military veterans looked on.
King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands laid a wreath to mark the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the Netherlands after the end of World War II.
Opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn also laid a floral tribute. The long-time pacifist wore a poppy, and sang the national anthem, having previously been criticised for remaining silent during its playing.
The Labour leader later attended a ceremony in his Islington constituency, where he read a verse by the first world war soldier poet Wilfred Owen. He chose not the better known Dulce et Decorum but a short poem, Futility, lamenting the death of a farm boy, one among the hundreds of thousands who would die in France, including Owen himself, killed in 1918.
The centrepiece of yesterday’s event was the two minute’s silence at 1100GMT, observed by millions of people across Britain and marked in London by the firing of an artillery gun.
Thousands of veterans earlier marched past the Cenotaph, Britain’s primary war memorial.
Later yesterday, a projection of giant falling poppies - the flower that has symbolised the nation’s war dead since World War I – was projected onto the Houses of Parliament.  Remembrance Sunday is the Sunday nearest to Armistice Day on November 11, the anniversary of the 1918 signing of the peace that ended fighting in World War I.
More than 1mn people from the British empire died in the four-year conflict, but the day has become a time to remember all the troops killed in wars since then.
It is thought there has been only one year -- 1968 -- without a British military fatality on active service since the end of World War II in 1945.



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