Sadiq Khan honours 52 victims killed in 7/7 bombings with flowers on the Hyde Park memorial marking the 14th anniversary
Sadiq Khan has honoured the victims of the UK’s first suicide attack (Picture: PA)

London Mayor Sadiq Khan laid a wreath at the 7/7 memorial in Hyde Park on Sunday morning to mark the 14th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the capital.

Khan was joined by British Transport Police chief Paul Crowther, Met Police commissioner Cressida Dick and City of London Police commissioner Ian Dyson to honour the 52 people killed in the bombings on July 7, 2005.

The mayor said: ‘Today we honour the 52 people who tragically lost their lives 14 years ago in the terrible attacks on our city.

‘We will never forget those innocent victims, and as we grieve for them we also pay tribute to the heroic efforts of the emergency services and first responders who selflessly ran towards danger to help others.

‘Londoners showed resilience and unity in the face of huge adversity in 2005, and sadly our city has faced difficult times since then.

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan lays a wreath at the 7/7 Memorial, in Hyde Park, London, to mark the anniversary of the terrorist attacks on London on July 7th 2005 that killed 52 people. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Sunday July 7, 2019. Photo credit should read: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire
The attack killed 52 people and injured more than 700 (Picture: PA)
Mayor of London Sadiq Khan lays a wreath at the 7/7 Memorial, in Hyde Park, London, to mark the anniversary of the terrorist attacks on London on July 7th 2005 that killed 52 people. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Sunday July 7, 2019. Photo credit should read: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire
Khan lays flowers on the memorial to mark the 14th anniversary (Picture: PA)
A woman lays flowers at the 7/7 Memorial, in Hyde Park, London, to mark the anniversary of the terrorist attacks on London on July 7th 2005 that killed 52 people. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Sunday July 7, 2019. Photo credit should read: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire
The 7/7 Memorial in Hyde Park (Picture: PA)
(left to right) Chief Constable of British Transport Police Paul Crowther, Metropolitan Police Commissioner Cressida Dick and City of London Police Commissioner Ian Dyson, lay wreaths at the 7/7 Memorial, in Hyde Park, London, to mark the anniversary of the terrorist attacks on London on July 7th 2005 that killed 52 people. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Sunday July 7, 2019. Photo credit should read: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire
(L-Rt) Chief Constable of British Transport Police Paul Crowther, Met Police Commissioner Cressida Dick and City of London Police Commissioner Ian Dyson (Picture: PA)
Flowers at the 7/7 Memorial, in Hyde Park, London, to mark the anniversary of the terrorist attacks on London on July 7th 2005 that killed 52 people. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Sunday July 7, 2019. Photo credit should read: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire
Today marks 14 years since the attack (Picture: PA)

‘But, standing together, we uphold the values that make this the best city in the world, united in defiance against terrorism.’

Home secretary Sajid Javid also paid his respects.

He tweeted: ‘We will never forget the 52 lives that were lost & the hundreds injured in the 7/7 attacks. Fourteen years on, our strength & resolve in the fight against terror remains undimmed. #WeStandTogether.’

The devastating attack was the UK’s first suicide attack and one of the worst in recent history.

The bombers’ journey began at 4am as three of the group – Mohammad Sidique Khan, 30, Shehzad Tanweer, 22, and 18-year-old Hasib Hussain – left Leeds to meet their 19-year-old accomplice Germaine Lindsay in Luton.

They travelled to the capital by train and detonated four devices – three on the Underground and one on a double decker bus.

Three of the four bombs went off at 8.50am on Tube trains departing from King’s Cross.

7 July London bombings On 7 July 2005, four suicide bombers attacked central London, killing 52 people and injuring hundreds more. It was one of the worst terrorist atrocities in Britain. The coroner at the inquests into those deaths has now ruled the victims were unlawfully killed. To find out more about the bombings, explore the timelines below. They tell the story of the attacks on Aldgate, Edgware Road, Russell Square and Tavistock Square as well as the emergency response. BBC NEWS
These are the 52 victims (Picture: BBC News)
A wounded woman is escorted away from the explosion in Aldgate
A wounded woman is escorted away from the explosion in Aldgate (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)

Khan detonated his device on a westbound Circle Line train towards Paddington, and it exploded at Edgware Road.

The device killed six people, after it took emergency services 22 minutes to reach the scene.

Tanweer detonated his device on an eastbound Circle Line train between Liverpool Street and Aldgate.

The explosion in the second carriage killed seven people.

The most deadly attack occurred on the Piccadilly Line between King’s Cross and Russell Square, where Lindsay killed 26 people.

Nicky, 42, who was travelling on the Picadilly Line when a bomb detonated on her Tube is looking for the kind stranger who helped her.

Hussain, the youngest of the bombers, detonated his bomb on a double-decker bus in Tavistock Square and killed 13 people.

The bombing took place around an hour after the other explosions.

Police officer Scott Mackenzie wants to meet the man he couldn’t help when the terrorists struck in London.

Remembering the 52 victims:

Michael Stanley Brewster, 52

Michael Brewster was a civil engineer and father-of-two from Derbyshire. His main interestes were the design and structure of bridges. Mr Brewster was a keen cyclist who rode 12 miles to work everyday and took part in triathlons to raise money for charity.

michael_brewster_144x144.jpg

Richard Gray, 41

Richard Gray was a chartered accountant who lived in Ipswich with his wife Louise and two children, Adam and Ruby. He commuted every day from Ispwich to his job with FW Smith Riches and Company in Pall Mall.

Richard Gray, 41, who died in the London terrorist bombing at Aldgate. The tax manager caught his usual train from Ipswich to London Liverpool Street and then the Tube last Thursday morning. See PA story POLICE Explosion Missing. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Photo credit should read: Suffolk Police/PA
Richard Gray (Picture: PA)

Anne Moffat, 48

Anne Moffat studied art in Hull before briefly moving to London. She returned to her family home in Old Harlow to look after her elderly mother, who died in 2002. She was head of marketing and communications for Girlguiding UK in Essex and was committed to helping others.

Fiona Stevenson, 29

Fiona Stevenson was a solicitor for specialist criminal law firm Reynolds Dawson in London. She dreamed of becoming a lawyer as a teenager and went to Sussex University to fulfil her ambition. She had just started her new job two weeks before she died.

Richard Ellery, 21

Richard Ellery was from Ipswich and was a shop worker for Jessops. He was the eldest of three children and left school at 18. He had moved in with friends in Ipswich shortly before he died.

Richard Ellery, 21, who has been missing since the London terrorist bombings on Thursday 7 July, 2005. See PA story POLICE Explosion Missing. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Photo credit should read: Sanrizz/PA
Richard Ellery (Picture: PA)

Carrie Taylor, 24

Carrie Taylor was a finance officer at the Royal Society of Arts. She was born in Sidcup, Kent and grew up in Billericay. She had a passion for drama and went on to study it at Royal Holloway University. She was offered a permanent job at the Royal Society of Arts three days before her death.

Carrie Taylor who was killed in the suicide bombings on 7/7/2005. Carrie died in the suicide bomb blast on 7th July 2005 at Aldgate Station in East London. Collect picture of Carrie . The makeover picture was a present on her 16th birthday. Picby Graham Hussey pic shows MR and MRS TAYLOR at home in BILLERICAY ,there daughter CARRIE was killed in the train bombings 7/7.Also looking at photographs of their daughter.which they find comforting.This pic is a collect it was a present on her 16th birthday a makeover picture.
Carrie Taylor

Jennifer Nicholson, 24

Jennifer Nicholson was from Reading and worked for a music company. She studied music and English at Reading University and was planning to do a PhD and marry her soulmate James White before she died.

jennifer nicholson bbc.jpg
Jennifer Nicholson (Picture: BBC)

Shelley Mather, 26

Shelley was a tour guide from new Zealand who had been living in London for three years. She left New Zealand in 2002 for a tour of Europe and ended up becoming a guide because she loved it so much.

Shelley Mather.jpg
Shelley Mather

Mike Minh Matsushita, 37

Mike had recently moved to Islington to start a new job in IT recruitment when he died. He lived in New York with his mother and grew up in the Bronx before coming to London to be with his girlfriend Rosie Cowan.

Michael Matsushita, 37, a tour guide who is missing after the Terrorist bombings in London. He quit his job in finance in New York City after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. He took a Picadilly Line train from Kings Cross, but failed to turn up at work. Picture Steve Waters.
Michael Matsushita (Picture: Steve Waters)

James Mayes, 28

James was an analyst for the Healthcare Commission from Islington. He studied politics at Warwick University and loved to debate. He was on his way to a seminar in Holborn when he was killed.

Behnaz Mozakka, 47

Behnaz was a biomedical officer at Great Ormond Street Hospital. She was born in Shiraz, Iran, before moving to Tehran, where she met her husband Naber, and had two children.

Behnaz Mozakka, 47, a biomedical officer at Great Ormond Street Hospital, is missing after the terrorist bombings on the London Underground, 7/7/2005. Behnaz, left her Finchley home just after 8am and should have been at work by 9am. She has not been heard of since. Collect pic of Mrs Mazy Mozakka missing at Kings Cross. Pic David Parker 8/7/05
Behnaz Mozakka (Picture: David Parker)

Mihaela Otto, 46

Mihaela was a dental technician from Mill Hill, north London. Originally from Romania, she moved to London in 1984 and worked as a Burberry sales assistant before qualifying in dentistry.

Mihaela Otto, 46 (DEAD 7/07) year old a dental technician from Mill Hill killed in the King's Cross terrorist bomb attacks on London on 7 July 2005. Michelle was heading for work in Knightsbridge.
Mihaela Otto

Atique Sharifi, 24

Atique was an Afghan national who lived in Hounslow. He came to London in 2002 having fled extremists in his homeland after both his parents were killed in the Kabul war. He worked part-time in a pizza take-away but dreamed of becoming a doctor.

Ateeque Sharifi (Atique Sharifi). Undated handout photo issued by West Thames College, Thursday July 21, 2005 of Ateeque Sharifi, who today became the last victim of the London bomb blasts to be formally identified. The 24-year-old Afghan national from Hounslow in west London fled from the brutal Taliban regime three years ago. See PA story POLICE Explosion Dead. PRESS ASSOCIATION photo. Photo credit should read: West Thames College/PA
Ateeque Sharif (Picture: PA)

Ihab Slimane, 24

Ihab was a waiter who lived in Finsbury Park, north London. The IT engineering graduate had been living in London for just three weeks when he was killed.

lhab slimane.jpg
lhab Slimane

Jonathan Downey, 34

Jonathan Downey was a HR systems development officer from Milton Keynes. He was strong Liverpool FC fan and was planning to move to Ireland with his wife Veronica.

john downey.jpg
John Downey

Rachelle Chung For Yuen, 27

Rachelle, originally from Mauritius, was an accountant from Mill Hill. She was a devout Roman Catholic and worked to pay her for her own accountancy studies. She came to Britain in 2000 to complete her training and married husband billy in 2004.

Rachelle Chung For Yuen.jpg
Rachelle Chung For Yuen.jpg

Ojara Ikeagwu, 55

Ojara was a social worker from Luton. She came to Britain with her husband and three children in 1976.

Ojara Ikeagwu itv.jpg
Ojara Ikeagwu itv.jpg

Emily Jenkins, 24

Emily was a personal assistant for a project management company. She lived in Peckham but grew up in Kew, south-west London. She dreamed of becoming a midwife.

EMILY JENKINS, 24, MISSING AFTER THURSDAY'S LONDON BOMBINGS. SHE WAS LAST HEARD OF AT 8.45AM ON THURSDAY MORNING AT KING'S CROSS UNDERGROUND STATION. SEE STORY...
Emily Jenkins

Gamze Gunoral, 24

Gamze was a Turkish national living in Totteridge. She was an only child and was brought up by her mother after her parents divorced when she was five. She had come to London for a year to improve her English.

Gamze Gunoral. (DIED at Kings Cross;Piccadilly Line tube bound for Russell Square)A poster pinned to the wall outside Kings Cross station, London appealing for information about Gamze Gunoral, 24 who is missing after the terror attacks in the capital last week, Monday July 11, 2005. She left her aunt's house in north London to catch the Tube to go to her language college in Hammersmith, west London. See PA story POLICE Explosion. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Photo credit should read: PA
Gamze Gunoral (Picture: PA)

Adrian Johnson, 37

Adrian was a married father-of-two and product technical manager from Nottinghamshire. One of his projects was working for Burberry, which took him all over Europe.

Adrian Johnson - Undated handout photo issued by Nottinghamshire Police Thursday 14 July 2005 of Adrian Johnson, 37, of Grange Farm Close, Sutton-in-Ashfield who was today confirmed as a victim of the London Underground bombings. Mr Johnson had been travelling on the Piccadilly Line Tube train, which was targeted at about 8.50am, between King's Cross and Russell Square. See PA Story POLICE Explosion Missing. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Photo credit should read: Nottinghamshire Police/PA
Adrian Johnson (Picture: PA)

Laura Webb, 29

Laura Webb worked as a personal assistant for an advertising firm in Paddington. She loved to travel and spent nearly a year in Thailand, Australia and South America with her boyfriend Chris Driver, before they cut their trip short after 9/11.

Laura Webb. Family handout photo of Laura Webb, 29, who died in the Edgware bomb during the London terrorist attacks on July 7, 2005. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Friday 30 June 2006. Robert Webb, the brother of 29-year-old, said he and his family would be remembering the 29-year-old by visiting the scene on the first anniversary of her death, where a plaque is being unveiled. Britain will observe a two-minute silence at noon on July 7 to mark the first anniversary of the London bombings. Bereaved families, survivors and Londoners will hear the names of the 52 victims read aloud at a commemorative event in Regent's Park. See PA stories MEMORIAL Explosions. Photo credit should read: Handout/PA
Laura Webb (Picture: PA)

Elizabeth Daplyn, 26

Elizabeth was a hospital administrator from Highgate. She graduated from Oxford University in 2001 with a degree in fine art. She moved into a flat with her boyfriend Rob Brennan, several months before her death.

Elizabeth Daplyn.26 year old hospital administrator from Highgate, (DIED at Kings Cross;Piccadilly Line tube bound for Russell Square) Undated handout photo issued Saturday July 9 2005 of Elizabeth Daplyn who has been missing since the terrorist attack in London on Thursday. See PA story POLICE Explosion Missing. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Photo credit should read: PA
Elizabeth Daplyn (Picture: PA)

Arthur Frederick, 60

Arthur was a museum security guard from Seven Sisters. Originally from the Caribbean, he moved to London after becoming worried about the eruption of Montserrat’s Soufriere Hills volcano in the late 1990s.

Arthur Frederick 60 a museum guard from Seven Sisters in North London Who died in the July 7th Suicide Bombing whilst on the train between Kings Cross and Russell Square
Arthur Frederick

Karolina Gluck, 29

Karolina was a Polish national living in Finsbury Park. She came to London in 2002 and started working at a private postgraduate college. At the time of her death, she and her sister were planning to return to Poland to introduced their boyfriends to their parents.

Karolina Gluck, 29, from Poland, who has been missing since the terrorist attack in London, 7 July, 2005. (DIED at Kings Cross;Piccadilly Line tube bound for Russell Square) She has not been seen since 8.30 am when she left home in Finsbury Park to travel to Russell Square for work.See PA story POLICE Explosion Missing. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Photo credit should read: PA
Karolina Gluck (Picture: PA)

Colin Morley, 52

Colin Morely, a father-of-three from Finchley, north London,worked in advertising. He grew up in Coulsdon in Surrey before going to university in London, where he met his wife Ros. He was known for his work in the popular mobile campaign: ‘Who would you like to have a one to one with?’

Colin Morley, victim of July 7 terrorist attacks. He died on the Edgware road Tube explosion.
Colin Morley

Helen Jones, 28

Helen was an accountant living in Holloway, north London. She was born in Edinburgh but grew up in Templand near Lockerbie. She moved to London in November 2001 and worked for Phoenix Equity Partners.

Helen Jones, who was killed in the July 7 bombing in London. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Monday June 19, 2006. Emma McDowell, 17, has been named as the first recipient of The Helen Jones Scholarship, created by the parents of the 28-year-old killed in the Russell Square blast last year. The fund was organised to help pupils at Ms Jones' former school Lockerbie Academy pursue a career in chartered accountancy. Helen was on her way to work at Phoenix Equity Partners in the City when she was killed in the series of co-ordinated bomb attacks on the London transport network. See PA story SOCIAL Scholarship. Photo credit should read: PA.
Helen Jones (Picture: PA)

Susan Levy, 53

Susan was a mother-of-two and worked as a legal secretary. She married husband Harry in 1976 and they lived in Ilford for 24 years before moving back to Hertfordshire where she grew up.

SUSAN LEVY - Undated handout picture, released by Hertfordshire Police of Susan Levy, 53, who was from Cuffley in Hertfordshire. An inquest into her death will open at St Pancras Coroner's court in the capital later Monday July 11, 2005. London went back to work as normal today as the first victim of last week's terror attacks was formally identified. See PA story POLICE Explosion. PRESS ASSOCIATION photo. Photo credit should read: Hertfordshire Police/PA
Susan Levy (Picture: PA)

Neetu Jain, 37

Neetu was a computer analyst from Hendon, north London. Born in New Delhi in India, she moved to the UK with her family in 1968. She had recently started a new job with  IT firm TXT4 based in Hoxton Square, east London, and was about to marry her partner.

Neetu Jain. Undated handout photo issued Friday July 8 2005 of Neetu Jain, 37, who has been missing since the terrorist attack in London yesterday. See PA story POLICE Explosion Missing. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Photo credit should read: PA
Neetu Jain (Picture: PA)

Christian Small, 28

Christian was an advertising sales worker from Walthamstow, east London. He was a keen Luton Town FC fan and had a passion for West Africa, particularly Ghana and Senegal.

Samantha Badham, 35

Samantha Badham was an internet designer who lived in Tottenham. She and her partner Lee Harris were killed after they changed their normal route and took the Tube to meet friends after work.

Philip Beer, 22

Philip was a hair stylist from Borehamwood. He started working at a salon after leaving school at 16. His friend Patrick Barnes, who was travelling with him on one of the attacked trains, said his last words to him were: ‘Everything’s going to be fine’.

Philip Beer 7-7 victim.jpg
Philip Beer

David Foulkes, 22

David Foulkes was a newspaper sales manager from Oldham, Manchester. He went to Hulme Grammar School and was part of the under-16 team that won the Greater Manchester squash championship. He had just started his new job at The Guardian and was in London on July 7 for a work meeting.

david foulkes.jpg
David Foulkes

Miriam Hyman, 31

Miriam was a picture researcher from Barnet, north London. She was born at London’s University College Hospital, graduated from University College London and was killed in Tavistock Square – all within about one square mile.

Miriam Hyman - Undated handout photo issued 8/7/05 by the Metropolitan Police of Miriam Hyman, 31, of Barnet, one of six more victims of the London terror attack who have been named by Scotland Yard Wednesday July 13 2005.SHE was one of the victims of the bombing of the bus in Tavistock Square last Friday. A total of 11 victims of the London bombings have now been identified. See PA story POLICE Explosion_Missing. PRESS ASSOCIATION. Photo. Photo credit should read: Metropolitan Police /PA
Miriam Hyman (Picture: PA)

Shahara Islam, 20

Shahara was a bank cashier from Plaistow, east London. Following travel disruption on the morning of July 7, she took the number 30 bus with a colleague, Emma Plunkett, who survived the blast.

Shahara Islam Her family described Shahara as an Eastender, a Londoner and British, but above all a true Muslim
Shahara Islam

Sam Ly, 28

Sam was a computer technician from Melbourne, Australia. He proposed to his girlfriend, Mandy Ha, at the age of five when they were at primary school and they moved to London together in 2003.

Sam Ly, (DEAD 7/05) 28, of Melbourne, Australia, a victim of the terrorist bombing on the number 30 bus in Tavistock Square, London, on July 7. He was taken to the National Hospital for Neurology but did not regain consciousness.
Sam Ly

Shyanuja Niroshini Parathasangary, 30

Shyanuja was a post office worker from Kensal Rise, north London. Born in Sri Lanka, she came to London with her family as a baby and went on to graduate from London’s South Bank University with a degree in business studies and administration.

Ms Shyanuja Parathasangary - Undated picture released by the Metropolitan Police of Ms Shyanuja Parathasangary, 30, who is believed to have died when a bomb exploded last Thursday on a bus in Tavistock Sq. See PA story POLICE Explosion. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Photo credit should read: Metropolitan Police / PA.
Shyanuja Parathasangary (Picture: PA)

Anat Rosenberg, 39

Anat was an Israeli charity worker who was living in Finsbury Park, north London. Born in Israel, she moved to London where she enjoyed going out almost every night to ballet, contemporary dance, theatre, opera and concerts.

Anat Rosenberg who has been missing since the terrorist bomb attack in London on Thursday 7 July, 2005. Israeli-born Miss Rosenberg, who was in her fifties, moved to Britain 18 years ago, fleeing her home country of Israel because of the threat of suicide bombings on buses. She was on a bus in Tavistock Swquare, and was on the phone to her boyfriend John Falding at the time of the bomb. Mr Falding heard the explosion down the line, followed by screams in the background, and then the line went dead. Picture Steve Waters
Anat Rosenberg (Picture: Steve Waters)

Philip Russell, 28

Philip grew up in Kent and graduated from Kingston University with a degree in business studies. He then went on a solo trip to South Africa, Australia and New Zealand before finding a job in the City of London. After joining JP Morgan Asset Management, he was promoted twice in the 20 months before his death.

Philip Russell, 28, (DEAD 7/05) a banker with JP Morgan pictured with niece Jasmine. Mr Russell was killed in the Tavistock Square bus bombing, one of a series of explosions which ripped through London's underground rail system on 7 July 2005, killing several people, in what appeared to be co-ordinated attacks to coincide with the start of a G8 summit in Scotland.
Philip Russell

William Wise, 54

William was an IT specialist from Notting Hill, west London. He grew up in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, and went on to marry his wife Christine in 1976.

William Wise, 54, married IT specialist from Notting Hill. Described as a Ògentle, gentle manÓ. July 7th bomb victim William Wise
William Wise, 54, married IT specialist from Notting Hill. Described as a Ògentle, gentle manÓ. July 7th bomb victim William Wise

James Adams, 32

James Adams was a mortgage broker from Peterborough. He went to King’s School where he shared bunk beds with Labour MP David Lammy. He also served as deacon at his church for three years.

James Adams, 32, from Peterborough, killed in the King's Cross London Underground tube train terrorist bombing of July 7, 2005. He was a mortgage consultant with Deloitte and Touche in The Strand, London.
James Adams

Lee Harris, 30

Lee Harris was an architect for 3DReid and worked on projects including Heathrow Airport’s central bus station and the Terminal 1 international departures lounge. He died alongside his partner Samantha Badham.

Lee Harris and Samantha Badham who were killed in the July 7 bombings in London. The funeral of the couple was held Friday August 5 2005, by family and friends at St Michael's and All Saints Church in Ledbury, Herefordshire, before they were buried together in a private ceremony . Ms Badham, a 35 year old web content editor and designer , grew up in the town, while 30-year-old Mr Harris, an architect, came from Hereford. See PA story FUNERAL Stations. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Photo credit should read: West Mercia Police/PA.
Lee Harris and Samantha Badham (Picture: PA)

Lee Baisden, 34

Lee was an accountant for the London Fire Brigade. He spent much of his tim caring for his mother, who has multiple sclerosis, after his father Patrick died in 1992. He had hoped to marry his partner Paul Groman before he was killed.

Lee Baisden, an accountant with the London Fire Brigade, from Romford, Essex, who was on the Circle Line when the Aldgate bomb went off during the series of explosions which ripped through London's underground rail system on 7 July 2005, killing several people, in what appeared to be co-ordinated attacks to coincide with the start of a G8 summit in Scotland.
Lee Baisden

Benedetta Ciaccia, 30

Benedetta was an IT business analyst from Norwich who worked for a publishing company. She grew up in Italy but moved to England at 19.She was two months away from marrying her fiance Fiaz Bhatti when she died.

Ciaran Cassidy, 22

Ciaran was a shop assistant from Upper Holloway, north London. He worked for a legal and stationery firm in Chancery Lane. He had been saving up to go to Australia at the time of his death.

Monika Suchocka, 23

Monika was a trainee accountant from Poland and lived in Archway, north London. She had only moved to London three months before the attacks and was considering whether to move back to Poland or not.

Anthony Fatayi-Williams, 26

Anthony was an oil executive from Hendon, north-west London. On the day of the bombings he helped point other commuters in the right direction following the previous bombings before getting on the number 30 bus.

Jamie Gordon, 30

Jamie was a City worker from Enfield, north London. He moved to Zimbabwe with his family as a small child before later returning to the UK. He was killed on July 7 after taking a different route to the office from his normal commute.

JAMIE GORDON - A collect handout photo of thirty-year-old Jamie Gordon who was identified in London Tuesday 12th July 2005 by the Identity Commission set up following last week's bomb attacks on London transport. Mr. Gordon was a city worker from Enfield, north London. He was aboard the bus that was blown up in Tavistock Square. EPA/HO ++ UK OUT++
Jamie Gordan (Picture: EPA)

Mala Trivedi, 51

Mala was a radiographer at Great Ormond Street Hospital. She was born in Nairobi, Kenya, and moved to London to study at Lambeth Hospital. She married her husband Ashock in 1975 and had one son, Kunaal.

Giles Hart, 55

Giles was a BT engineer from Hornchurch, Essex. Born in Sudan, he moved to the UK at the age of five. He enjoyed cinema history and spent much of his time campaigning for justice and liberty. After his death he was awarded one of Poland’s most prestigious honours for his services to democracy.

Undated handout photo issued Saturday July 9 2005 of Giles Hart, 55, a BT worker from Hornchurch in Essex who has been missing since the terrorist attack in London on Thursday. He is believed to have been in the Aldgate area at the time of the bombings. See PA story POLICE Explosion Missing. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Photo credit should read: PA
Giles Hart (Picture: PA)

Marie Hartley, 34

Marie worked at a greetings card firm and was from Oswaldtwistle, Lancashire. She was in London on the morning of 7/7 to attend an exhibition in Islington, north London, with a colleague.

Marie Hartley (L), 34, from Lancashire, who has been missing since the terrorist attack in London on Thursday 7 July, 2005. She was in London on a course.. See PA story POLICE Explosion Missing. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Photo credit should read: PA
Marie Hartley (Picture: PA)

Gladys Wundowa, 50

Gladys was from Ilford, Essex and worked as a cleaner at University College London. Born in Ghana to a poor cocoa farming family, she moved to London in 1983 as the maid of a Lebanese family. She was planning to return to her homeland with her husband when she was murdered.

Emmanuel Wundowa, 53, from Chadwell Heath, with his wife Gladys Wundowa, 51, who has been missing since the London terrorist bombings. She was last seen by a collegue walking down the Euston Road just before 9am. His mobile number is 07949929950 pic by Frances Leader
Gladys Wundowa, left (Picture: Frances Leader)

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