Cape Argus

WW1 dead remembered

World leaders gather in Paris to reaffirm ‘never again’

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WORLD leaders with the power to make war but a duty to preserve the peace gathered by the dozens yesterday to mark the end of World War I’s slaughter 100 years ago, turning Paris into the epicentre of global commemorat­ions that drove home a powerful message: never again.

More than 60 heads of state and government gathered – silent, sombre and reflective – for a ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, the mute and powerful symbol of sacrifice to the millions who died from 1914-18.

“The traces of this war never went away,” French President Emmanuel Macron said.

“The old demons are rising again. We must reaffirm before our peoples our true and huge responsibi­lity.”

The Paris weather – grey and damp – seemed aptly fitting when rememberin­g a war fought in mud and relentless horror.

The commemorat­ions started late, overshooti­ng the centenary of the exact moment when, 100 years earlier at 11am, the eerie silence of peace replaced the thunder of guns on the Western front. As bells marking the armistice hour started ringing out across Paris, and in many nations hit by the four years of slaughter, Macron and other leaders were still on their way to the centennial site at the Arc de Triomphe.

Under a sea of black umbrellas, a line of leaders led by Macron and his wife Brigitte marched in a stony silence on the cobbles of the Champs-Elysees, after getting out of their cars.

Trump arrived separately, in a motorcade that drove past two topless protesters with anti-war slogans on their chests who somehow got through the rows of security and were quickly bundled away by police.

The Femen group claimed responsibi­lity.

Last to arrive was Russian President Vladimir Putin. German Chancellor Angela Merkel was positioned in pride of place between Trump and Macron, a powerful symbol of victors and vanquished now standing together, shoulder to shoulder. Overhead, fighter jets ripped through the sky, trailing red, white and blue smoke.

The geographic­al spread of the leaders in attendance showed how the “war to end all wars” left few corners of the Earth untouched but which, little more than two decades later, was followed so quickly and catastroph­ically by the even deadlier World War II.

On the other side of the globe, Australia and New Zealand held ceremonies to recall how the war killed and wounded soldiers and civilians in unpreceden­ted numbers and in gruesome new, mechanised ways.

Those countries lost tens of thousands of soldiers far away in Europe and, most memorably in the brutal 1915 battle of Gallipoli in Turkey.

In Paris, the jewel that Germany sought to capture in 1914 but which the Allies fought successful­ly to defend, the armistice commemorat­ions were being followed by the afternoon opening of a peace forum pushed by the host, Macron.

Trump will be the most notable absentee at the forum. Trump lives by an “America first” credo, and planned to visit the American cemetery at Suresnes on the outskirts of Paris before heading home.

On Saturday, he was criticised for cancelling a visit to the Belleau Wood battlegrou­nd north-east of Paris because of rain.

In the four years of fighting, France, the British empire, Russia and the US had the main armies opposing a German-led coalition that also included the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman empires. Almost 10 million soldiers died, sometimes tens of thousands on a single day.

The US came late to the war, but over 1½ years it became a key player in the conflict and tipped the scales for the allies. When the war ended on November 11, 1918, the US military was on the cusp of becoming the major military power in the world.

Even though Germany was at the heart of provoking two world wars over the past century, the nation has become a beacon of European and internatio­nal co-operation since.

Merkel yesterday met the head of the United Nations, born from the ashes of World War II, and the president of Serbia. It was a Serb teenager, Gavrilo Princip, who assassinat­ed the Austro-Hungarian crown prince in Sarajevo in 1914 to set off events which led to the outbreak of war.

 ?? | AP African News Agency (ANA) ?? FROM left, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II and Kate, Duchess of Cambridge, attend the Remembranc­e Sunday ceremony at the Cenotaph in London, yesterday.
| AP African News Agency (ANA) FROM left, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II and Kate, Duchess of Cambridge, attend the Remembranc­e Sunday ceremony at the Cenotaph in London, yesterday.

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