Brighton IRA bombing 30th anniversary marked
The explosion destroyed the front of the hotel and caused several floors to collapse
Events are being held in Brighton later to mark the 30th anniversary of the IRA bombing of the Grand Hotel.
Five people died and 34 were injured in the attack aimed at prime minister Margaret Thatcher and her cabinet.Conservative Party members were staying at the hotel during their 1984 party conference in Brighton.
Prime Minister David Cameron said: "As we remember today those killed and injured in Brighton, we must renew our vow that terrorism must never win."
The flag on the hotel roof will be flown at half mast on Sunday.
Staff are also set to gather around a plaque in the hotel lobby which was unveiled by former Conservative minister Lord Tebbit, who was seriously injured in the attack.
"I will never forget those shocking images as members of the emergency services scrambled over the rubble to rescue those wounded in the blast.
"But I also remember Margaret Thatcher's defiant response later that day.
"She declared Britain will never be cowed by terrorists and said their sickening attempts to destroy our democracy would fail."
A minute's silence will also be held in the city.
- Anthony Berry
- Roberta Wakeham
- Eric Taylor
- Muriel Maclean
- Jeanne Shattock
"To reflect on what it must have been like for our colleagues at the time and to remember those who lost their lives, those who were injured, the community in Brighton that was so badly affected, and members of the emergency services who were called to the blast."
Patrick Magee, who planted the device, is also planning to take part in a discussion following a screening of the documentary Beyond Right & Wrong at The Old Market in Hove.
Lord Tebbit was severely injured and his wife Margaret was left paralysed from the neck down following the blast.
He said: "I think about it every day in the sense that I look at my wife who was sentenced to life imprisonment in a wheelchair."
Lord Tebbit said he has nothing but contempt for Magee, who was given eight life sentences at the Old Bailey in 1986, with a recommendation he serve a minimum of 35 years.
He was released in 1999 under the Good Friday Agreement.
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