Britain will today mark the one year anniversary of the terror attack on Westminster Bridge, the first in a series of jihadist assaults in the UK in 2017 that killed dozens of people and left scores injured.
On March 22 last year, Khalid Masood, a 52-year-old British convert to Islam, mowed down with a car pedestrians on the bridge over the River Thames in the heart of the London, before fatally stabbing a policeman on guard outside parliament.
The attack killed five people and injured around 50, and only ended when Masood was shot dead by police.
The Islamic State group claimed responsibility, but investigators have said they found no evidence of an association.
The incident mirrored truck attacks in Europe, including the 2016 Bastille Day assault in Nice that killed 86 people, and a similar attack months later on a Christmas market in Berlin that claimed 12 lives.
Britain endured a tumultuous period following the March 22 rampage, with four further terror attacks, including three in the capital at London Bridge, Finsbury Park and Parsons Green tube station.
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"It was a sick and depraved attack on the streets of our capital, but what I remember most is the exceptional bravery of our police and security services, who risked their lives to keep us safe," British Prime Minister Theresa May told the House of Commons on Wednesday.
With May in Brussels on Thursday, interior minister Amber Rudd and Leader of the House of Commons Andrea Leadsom will attend a commemorative event in Westminster Hall, inside the parliamentary complex, on Thursday to mark the anniversary.
Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, has announced plans for the hashtag "LondonUnited" to be displayed at the locations targeted on the anniversaries of each attack, with the phrase projected onto the Houses of Parliament Thursday.
A 3D installation of #LondonUnited will also be located at City Hall, home to Khan's devolved administration, where the public will be able to pay their respects and sign a "digital book of hope".
Khan said the commemoration was drawn up after consultation with 14 bereaved families, survivors, the emergency services and local councils.
"Londoners will never forget the horrific terror attacks on our city in 2017," the mayor added in a statement.
"These were not only attacks on our city and our country, but on the very heart of our democracy and the values we cherish most -- freedom, justice and tolerance."
"I had a big depression, I'm just trying to be happy again, which is hard on some days, I'm anxious, I'm afraid of traffic."
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