Britain commemorates the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II

On Monday, the British began celebrations marking the eighties of the end of World War II in Europe, with a military parade and greeting by the royal family to the crowds from the balcony of Buckingham Palace.
The celebrations, which are scheduled to last for 4 days, began reading excerpts from the speech of the late Prime Minister Winston Churchill on May 8, 1945, and a military parade in which more than a thousand members of the British armed forces participated.
Eleven Ukrainian soldiers received a call for confirmation of Britain’s support for Kiev, raising their country’s flag, in addition to fifty soldiers from the “NATO” forces. They surrounded the members of the royal family, King Charles III, who has been receiving treatment for 15 months for cancer, greeted the crowds from the balcony of Buckingham Palace, which flew to 23 old and modern aircraft, then the Red Arz unit raised the leaving offers A triple -colored cloud in the sky, according to the French Press Agency. The king attended the show in military uniform with Queen Camilla, Prince William, his wife Catherine, their three children, George (11 years), Charlotte (10 years) and Louis (7 years). Prime Minister Kiir Starmer attended with about twenty warriors, many of whom reached 100 years. Thousands gathered along the way decorated with British flags. Some spent tonight in the place so that they would not miss anything from this historic day.


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