Tunisia attack: Minute's silence for victims
- Published
Images from around the UK and Tunisia as memorials are held to remember the 38 people - including 30 Britons - killed in last week's gun attack in Sousse.
A minute's silence was held in the UK, while people gathered at the beach-side scene of the attack and linked arms to pay their respects.

Owen Richards, 16, who survived the attack that killed three members of his family, was joined by relatives, players and supporters at Walsall Football Club, where scarves have been laid in honour of the men, who were fans of the team

Staff and councillors at Sandwell local authority in the West Midlands also paid their respects to their colleague Mr Evans, 44, who died in the attack alongside his father, 78-year-old Charles (known as Patrick) Evans, and nephew Joel Richards, 19

The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh joined the minute's silence during a tour of Glasgow's Strathclyde University

The start of play at Wimbledon was delayed to allow players and spectators to honour those who died

In London, staff at the Tunisian embassy gathered on the steps to pay their respects

The prime minister was on a visit to a health centre in his Witney constituency, in Oxfordshire, where he joined the silence

Flags flew at half mast on UK government buildings

People joined hands to observe the silence on the beach near the scene of the attack in Sousse

In Luton, staff at the holiday company TUI stepped outside their offices to observe the silence. All 30 Britons killed were its customers

The roar normally associated with Formula 1 motor racing was briefly absent at the British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Britain's Lewis Hamilton was among those taking part in the silence

The British Ambassador to Tunisia, Hamish Cowell, second left, joined Tunisian Prime Minister Habib Essid and Tourism Minister Selma Rekik Elloumi at a ceremony
- Published3 July 2015
- Published29 February 2016
- Published3 July 2015