The United
States on Friday remembered nearly 3,000 people killed on September 11, 2001,
when al-Qaeda terrorists attacked New York and Washington.
U.S.
President Donald Trump marked the 19th anniversary in Pennsylvania, at the site
where one of the four hijacked planes crashed after passengers attempted to regain
control from the hijackers.
After the
names of the 40 deceased passengers and crew were recited, Trump urged unity.
“Our sacred
task, our righteous duty and our solemn pledge are to carry forward the noble
legacy of the brave souls who gave their lives for us 19 years ago,” he said.
“In their
memory, we resolve to stand united as one American nation, to defend our
freedoms, to uphold our values, to love our neighbours, to cherish our country,
to care for our communities, to honour our heroes, and to never, ever forget,”
he added.
Joe Biden,
the Democratic presidential nominee, attended a morning ceremony at the 9/11
memorial in New York, where attackers flew two aeroplanes into the Twin Towers
of the World Trade Center.
Vice
President Mike Pence and New York Governor Andrew Cuomo also attended the
commemoration at ground zero, at which attendees were required to wear masks
and stay socially distant.
Biden and
Pence exchanged elbow bumps, a popular greeting in the coronavirus era,
displaying unity amid a campaigning season marked by stark political division.
Thereafter,
Biden travelled to Pennsylvania, a key battleground state in the November
presidential election, though he did not cross paths with Trump.
The former
vice president, who vowed to avoid campaigning for the day, laid a wreath at
the memorial site, spoke with mourners, and brought beer and pastries to a
local fire department.
Democratic
vice presidential nominee Kamala Harris attended a ceremony near the Pentagon,
which was also hit by the attackers.
The
hijackings were the single worst attack on U.S. soil in the country’s history.
However, the
high death toll from the coronavirus, with more than 190,000 fatalities and
rising, cast a heavy shadow over this year’s memorial.
New York City
has been the hardest-hit area of the country, with more than 23,000 deaths.
Beams of
light shone into the sky over New York overnight from where the Twin Towers
once stood.
A similar
beam came up from the Pentagon just outside Washington.
Flags were at
half-staff, including at the White House, and bells tolled in New York City to
honour the dead.
Many of the
normal memorial events were scaled back as a safety precaution, with fewer
speeches and some aspects limited to immediate families only.
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