London 7/7 attacks: How the day unfolded (montage) – BBC News
On 7 July 2005, four suicide bombers attacked central London, killing 52 people and injuring hundreds more. It was one of the worst terrorist atrocities in Britain. Ten years on, BBC News looks back at how the day unfolded.
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My dad was on the underground at the time
Thanks islam❤
Now they chanting for islam
I was only a few hours awau from being stuck in this
Bbc I need help the American government is nanochipping and weaponsing british civilians and they brainwashed to transition
Elizabeth fake royals is also form of terrorism being covered for years by force
By untrained departments..
The most fucked up thing? not even 20 years later, we're all accepting middle easterners into our countries no questions asked!
I have heard of this news when I was 6 years old in July 2005 and it was before 2006 and 2007
Man said was power issue f off it was terroisim
☪️lassic
After 7/7 London bombings, all gov buildings were locked down. In defiance of terror, the US Marine Corp band stood outside the American embassy-despite risk of further possible attacks- and played God Save The Queen
Can’t believe it’s been 19 years
My mum was a nurse working in London at the time, she told me of how she had to hold a man's head together as it had been split open. She told me that story when I was still a kid, so I don't know the details, but she was obviously bothered by some of the stories she shared with me. She used to drill into my head to never play Chicken, ever, as she was responsible for cleaning up after accidents on train lines where kids had been playing Chicken. Imagine responding to a call about mutilated children, and then having to go back home to meet your kids. I can't tell if nurses are tough, or just crazy.
My father was working at an office near Aldgate, and was meant to go to the office that morning, until prior to the event, plans were changed on him coming into the office, thus he avoided being on London Underground trains via Liverpool Street/Aldgate station.
I cannot express how high my sorrow is for those, easily much closely involved with such nobody deserved to be amongst, whether a regular commuter/person working in London, or else. I was 2 years old at the time.
I was visiting Central London just a few days before these attacks.
My good friend was living in "the big L", London when this happened, he had to walk for two hours to get home as the buses were off. A sad state of affairs that humans have to behave like this.
That guy at Aldgate who says “I can confirm bomb damage to the train”… anyone know when exactly that was. It seems like it took ages for everyone to realise the explosions were bombs and not power surges