This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/england/wiltshire/7665766.stm
The article has changed 5 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 2 | Version 3 |
---|---|
Forces honour small town's effort | |
(about 4 hours later) | |
Members of the armed forces have been parading through a Wiltshire town to thank locals for honouring dead British service personnel. | |
Over the past 18 months residents of Wootton Bassett have lined the streets more than 100 times as coffins have been brought through the town. | Over the past 18 months residents of Wootton Bassett have lined the streets more than 100 times as coffins have been brought through the town. |
The town is near RAF Lyneham, the airbase to which bodies are repatriated after deaths in Afghanistan or Iraq. | The town is near RAF Lyneham, the airbase to which bodies are repatriated after deaths in Afghanistan or Iraq. |
Sunday afternoon's tribute also saw a flypast from a Hercules aircraft. | |
The tradition of residents lining the streets as coffins were driven through Wootton Bassett began in April 2007 after a decision was made to bring all service personnel war dead home to Britain through RAF Lyneham. All we can do is spare a few moments of our lives Anne Bevis, Royal British Legion | |
Previously, dead servicemen and woman had been flown back to RAF Lyneham or RAF Brize Norton. | |
In a letter to the town thanking the residents for the gesture, the head of the British Army, Sir Richard Dannatt, said: "I am writing to express my sincere gratitude. | |
"In many respects, it is the things that cost nothing that are the ones that are the most important - a friendly greeting in the street, a prayer in church... But the gestures shown by the people of Wootton Bassett surpass these at every level."The tribute included a flypast by a Hercules aircraft | |
Among those who regularly turn out to pay their respects are former servicemen and women. | Among those who regularly turn out to pay their respects are former servicemen and women. |
Former soldier Tony Abrahams told BBC News: "I never miss an armistice parade. It's just to show your appreciation. | |
"It's something you feel you ought to do and I think this should be appreciated right throughout the land." | |
Anne Bevis, local secretary of the Royal British Legion, said: "Those lads that are being brought through this town, all we can do is spare a few moments of our life. | |
"They've given theirs, so a few moments of ours is nothing." | "They've given theirs, so a few moments of ours is nothing." |
Defence Secretary John Hutton, who also attended the parade, added: "We're all here today to say thank you to the armed forces and for the support that has been shown locally to our forces serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. | |
"People are very proud of our armed forces." |