Britain remembers 7/7 victims 10 years on
Services have taken place and a minute's silence held in memory of the 52 people killed in the London bombings in 2005.
Services have taken place and a minute's silence held in memory of the 52 people killed in the London bombings in 2005.
Paul Dadge, who became well known after a picture of him helping the wounded after the 7/7 attack was shown around the world, has said that the "7/7 extended family will be there to support" those involved in the Tunisia terror attack.
Paul told ITV News: "The people involved in 7/7 we're very much like an extended family, we've been on this journey for ten years now. I not only want to remember the 52 that died in the UK but also those who've died in Tunisia. And for them to know that should they need the support of people who have been in the same situation that the 7/7 family will be there to support them."
Little did an art teacher from Oxfordshire expect to spend his morning in London saving lives in the aftermath of terrorist attacks.
10 years on, George Psaradakis has given his first interview, recalling the events of July 7 2005.
Dozens of plots have been thwarted since July 7, 2005, but are we any less vulnerable to terror attacks?