Scotland to remember fallen on Armistice Day
Scotland will fall silent to honour those who have died in conflicts around the world on Armistice Day.
The traditional two-minute period of remembrance will take place at 11:00 on 11 November across the country.
The day is commemorated every year at 11:00 to mark the signing of the armistice between the Allies and Germany in 1918.
Civic and political leaders laid wreaths at war memorials around the UK on Sunday.
First minister John Swinney was among the dignitaries to lay a wreath at the Stone of Remembrance outside Edinburgh City Chambers during a ceremony on Sunday.
He said those who died in World Wars One and Two had âpaid the ultimate priceâ in order to ensure âthe freedoms we all now enjoyâ.
Swinney, whose uncle Cpl Tom Hunter was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross after dying in Italy during World War Two in 1945, said: âIt is central to our understanding of our freedoms and our democracy today that we understand the sacrifices which were made by previous generation to make sure we could live in the type of society we live in.â
Army veteran Derek âBennyâ Bennett, who spent 25 years as a member of the armed forces, said the âscarsâ service personnel carried from âless talked-aboutâ wars were just as real as those experienced by former soldiers who fought in more prominent conflicts.
Mr Bennett, 72, who served with the parachute regiment in Northern Ireland, was speaking ahead of the traditional Armistice Day ceremonies set to take place across Scotland on Monday.
Mr Bennett, originally from Shotton in North Wales, lives in a home run by veteransâ charity Erskine in Edinburgh.
He saw active service in Northern Ireland, served in a peacekeeping mission in Cyprus, and as a liaison officer in the Gulf War.
He recalled one episode at the height of the Troubles when a rocket fired from an RPG missed his vehicle by âsix inchesâ and another when serving with the Paras on the ground in Cyprus in 1974 during the Turkish invasion.
In 1989 he was deployed to Tel Aviv in Israel, where he served as a liaison officer with the multinational force and observers (MFO) during the first Gulf War, attempting to ensure their safety under bombardment from Scud missiles.
Mr Bennett was paralysed in 2018 after suffering a spinal cord injury, but said he still carried his experiences prior to leaving the armed forces in 1992.
âItâs crucial we remember not just the big wars like the Second World War, the Falklands, Afghanistan, or Iraq, but all the conflicts and peacekeeping missions that donât always make the headlines,â he said.
âI know people who have suffered, and I personally know that the scars â whether seen or unseen â are just as real for those who served in less talked-about places.
âThe impact on those who were there is the same, and their sacrifices deserve the same respect and remembrance.â
Westminsterâs SNP leader Stephen Flynn appeared alongside the other leaders of the UK parties and every living former prime minister at Londonâs Cenotaph commemoration.
King Charles, the Prince and Princess of Wales and other senior royals also appeared at the ceremony.
Further ceremonies will take place in Scotland on Monday.