THE Anzac Day tradition remains strong among Australians and New Zealanders in London.
About 3000 expats came together to pay their respects at a dawn service in Hyde Park on Thursday.
A crowd spanning all ages was greeted by a mild London morning, with some clad in green and gold and others draped in the Australian flag.
Michael Hutchinson, a 29-year-old who moved from Sydney four years ago, said the London Anzac Day service allowed him to carry on a tradition that started when he spent Anzac Day in Gallipoli in 2009.
“Basically my grandfather fought in World War II and Korea so I have always had a deep respect and appreciation for the sacrifice that he and his fellow veterans made,” Mr Hutchinson told AAP.
“I had never attended a dawn service until I visited Gallipoli and I was so moved by the experience that I made a promise to myself I would ensure I attended a dawn service each year.”
The Duke of Kent was in attendance while Australia’s opposition foreign affairs spokeswoman Julie Bishop laid a wreath during the London ceremony.
Australia’s high commissioner to Britain, Mike Rann, told the gathering the occasion was also about honouring those still fighting for their country today.
“In a time of terrorism, when the enemy is often unknown and unseen, we honour not only those who have fallen over the years but those who continue to bravely serve us in places like Afghanistan and in peacekeeping operations around the world,” Mr Rann said.
“On this day we remember our fallen comrades as the best of our breed, the saviours of all we cherish and the architects of who and what we are.”
Read the full Anzac Day in London speech by Mike Rann
A wreath-laying parade and ceremony at the Cenotaph on Whitehall and a memorial service at Westminster Abbey were to be held later on today.
The dawn service is held on alternating years at each country’s memorial, located diagonally opposite each other.
Anzac Day commemorations have taken place in London since 1916.
It’s estimated about 300,000 Australians and 200,000 New Zealanders reside in the UK.
1ST IMAGE: Father Martin Hislop addresses the Anzac Day ceremony in London, Thursday, April 25, 2013. Australia is commemorating the 98th anniversary of the landing at Gallipoli during WW1. (AAP Image/Liam FitzGibbon)
2ND IMAGE: Two servicemen watch the ceremony at the New Zealand memorial during Anzac Day commemorations in London, Thursday, April 25, 2013. (AAP Image/Liam FitzGibbon)