![A vigil at Trafalgar Square for the victims of the attack at Westminster.](/web/20170326213752im_/http://www.watoday.com.au/content/dam/images/g/v/5/b/c/z/image.related.landscape.460x307.gv5bdi.png/1490361122857.jpg)
London terror attacks vigil in Trafalgar Square solemn and sincere
It was a very British vigil. But heartfelt, in that particular way the British show their feelings.
Nick Miller is Europe correspondent for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age
It was a very British vigil. But heartfelt, in that particular way the British show their feelings.
London: A mother on her way to collect her two daughters from school was killed during Wednesday's terror attack in Westminster.
British police have made seven arrests and searched six addresses after an attack near parliament which left five people dead and 29 injured.
Front pages reflected a mood of shock at how close terror had come to the heart of its political life and history.
Terror attacks may have become easier. But society is now more resilient.
The terror threat level in the UK has been at severe – meaning an attack is 'highly likely' – since 2014.
If Russia's rising Baltic ambitions and Trump's threat that European allies cannot rely on US support reach a flashpoint, it may be in Estonia. Are preparations for war already under way?
A century on from the revolution a new exhibition at the museum explores the Soviet capital that never came to be.
Cue a whole lot of mock-outrage. How dare the Scottish Nationalists propose, again, that Scotland leave the UK?
Scotland's first minister Nicola Sturgeon has launched a fresh push for independence, complaining she hit a brick wall trying to avoid her country being dragged down a "hard Brexit" path.
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