VE Day live: ceremonies to take place across UK and Europe to mark 80th anniversary of Victory in Europe | VE Day

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Europe and UK to mark 80 years since VE day

Today, Europe will mark the 80th anniversary of the end of the second world war, with events to take place on the continent and farther afield.

Solemn ceremonies will be held at war memorials in towns and villages across France as the country honours its dead and marks the 80th anniversary of Victory in Europe (VE) Day, a public holiday this year, as it is every year.

Germany will for the first time make the day a public holiday, while in the UK the anniversary will be marked with a service at Westminster Abbey in London, to begin with a national two-minute silence.

Commemoration events in the UK – which began with a military procession and Royal Air Force (RAF) flypast on Monday – will conclude with a concert at Horse Guards Parade attended by about 10,000 people. The concert will feature stars of stage and screen including John Newman and dames Joan Collins, Mary Berry and Sheila Hancock, as well as military musicians, and tell the story of victory and the legacy of the second world war in Europe.

The commemorations take place against backdrop of the Ukraine conflict, rises in defence spending and a US foreign policy shift.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has called for allies to unite to fight Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, as Europe celebrates 80 years since the defeat of Nazi Germany in the second world war. Zelensky said in an address:

Just as it did 80 years ago, when it finally became clear to everyone: evil cannot be appeased. It must be fought. Together. Resolutely. With force. With pressure.

We will bring news of the ceremonies taking place across the UK and Europe as the day goes on.

Key events

Another from the Guardian archive:

Liberation: jubilant crowds in St Peter Port, Guernsey, May 1945. Photograph: piemags/ww2archive/Alamy

St Peter Port, Guernsey

I watched the final surrender of the German garrison in the Channel Islands, and half an hour later I saw the delirious joy of the freedom that surrender brought. I saw, as I landed with the first British soldiers of the forces of freedom, scenes that were almost indescribable – the tears and cheers which 22 men of the Royal Artillery released as they came to St Peter Port to take over the garrison, which had been commanded by the German Vice-Admiral Huffmeier.

This handful of artillerymen who went to take over an island with a garrison of ten thousand Germans, oldish soldiers, went ashore in a German trawler flying the White Ensign. The police inspector and a sergeant, Guernsey men, were the unofficial reception party on the dock, and both of them were choking back the tears when, speechless, they grasped our hands.

The tiny force formed up on the docks, fixed bayonets, and marched towards the dock gates. There, behind those gates, was a seething, cheering, crying mob of men, women and children. Over them the church bells of St Peter Port were clanging tumultuously, every house had its union jack and bunting, saved through five long desperate wearing years for this moment.



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