Video: Britain honours victims of Tunisia terror attack

Minute silence at Leeds Station for those killed in Tunisia. PIC: Steve RidingMinute silence at Leeds Station for those killed in Tunisia. PIC: Steve Riding
Minute silence at Leeds Station for those killed in Tunisia. PIC: Steve Riding
Britain has remembered the victims of the Tunisia terror attack with a minute’s silence.

The silence was observed at noon - a week after the outrage - with flags flown at half-mast over Whitehall departments and Buckingham Palace.

The bodies of 17 of the 30 British victims killed in the beach massacre have been returned to the UK and more are expected to be repatriated today and tomorrow.

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The British victims were among the 38 holidaymakers who were killed by Seifeddine Rezgui when he opened fire in the resort of Sousse.

Minute silence at Leeds Station for those killed in Tunisia. PIC: Steve RidingMinute silence at Leeds Station for those killed in Tunisia. PIC: Steve Riding
Minute silence at Leeds Station for those killed in Tunisia. PIC: Steve Riding

Three Irish nationals, two Germans, one Belgian, one Portuguese and one Russian were among the dead.

The first inquests into the deaths of the Britons will open at West London Coroner’s Court today.

Coroner Chinyere Inyama is expected to open and adjourn the hearings in which a headline cause of death will be confirmed and the bodies will be released to families.

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Recent days have seen military personnel complete the solemn task of receiving some of the victims on British soil in a ceremony at RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire.

Members of the RAF Regiment’s Queen’s Colour Squadron unloaded the coffins from the RAF C-17 transport plane used to bring them back from Tunisia into the waiting hearses.

They were watched by relatives of the dead who were present at the air base.

Holiday operators Thomson and First Choice have confirmed that all 30 British victims were their customers.

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It is believed Rezgui - who was shot dead by police - had accomplices who helped him to carry out the atrocity and the Tunisian government said it had made a number of arrests.

Eight people - seven men and one woman - were in custody, suspected of having direct links to the massacre, but four others had been released, government minister Kamel Jendoubi said.

He said the investigation “has allowed us to discover the network behind the operation in Sousse”.

According to Tunisian officials, the gunman trained at a Libyan jihadist camp at the same time as the two gunmen who attacked the Bardo museum in Tunis in March, killing 22 people.

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Defence Secretary Michael Fallon vowed that those responsible for the massacre would be “tracked down”.

The Metropolitan Police said 76 family liaison officers across the country were supporting the families of those killed and the survivors while hundreds of counter terrorism officers were helping the international response to the attack.

Specialist advisers have also been deployed to Tunisia by the National Policing Counter Terrorism Headquarters to assist the Foreign Office and Tunisian authorities in reviewing security at other tourist resorts and attractions.

Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley, the national policing lead for counter terrorism, said: “With the threat level to the UK from international terrorism remaining at severe, the UK police service is continually reviewing security to help ensure people and places are as safe as possible.”

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He appealed for anyone who was in Sousse and witnessed the attack to contact the confidential anti-terrorist hotline on 0800 789 321.

He also said that dedicated email addresses for people to send any images and information “that may assist” in the investigation has also been set up.

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The Foreign and Commonwealth Office has confirmed the names of all the British nationals killed in the Tunisia attack. They are:

Christopher and Sharon Bell; Lisa Mary Burbidge; Scott Chalkley and Sue Davey; Stuart Cullen; Christopher Dyer; Adrian Evans, Pat Evans and Joel Richards; Angie and Ray Fisher; Lisa and William Graham; Philip Heathcote; Trudy Jones; Carly Lovett; Ann and James McQuire; Stephen Mellor; Janet and John Stocker; John Stollery; Eileen Swannack and John Welch; David Thompson; Denis and Elaine Thwaites; Bruce Wilkinson; Claire Windass.

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