PRINCE Charles has hailed the “incomparable” D-Day veterans on the 77th anniversary of the Normandy landings
The Prince Of Wales paid tribute to the World War Two heroes as he opened the British Normandy Memorial with a video message.
Read our Royal Family live blog for the latest updates
He spoke of the “debt of gratitude” the world feels to the men who fought and died on D-Day as allied forces battles to liberate Western Europe
The memorial was opened on the 77th anniversary of the date that allied troops stormed the beaches of France in 1944.
It remembers almost 22,500 troops under British command killed during D-Day and subsequent battles.
It overlooks Gold Beach, one of three beaches where British forces landed to battle Nazi forces as the liberation of Western Europe was launched.
D-DAY TRIBUTE
Charles said: “I know just how much our incomparable Veterans had hoped to be in Normandy today to see“their” Memorial for themselves.
“Despite having to watch via satellite link, this in no way obscures the enormous regard, and admiration, in which we hold our Veterans or diminishes our debt of gratitude to the more than 22,000 men and women whose names are now permanently inscribed in stone in this place of honour above Gold Beach.
“I can only hope that this serves to commemorate all those whose lives were lost during the events of June 1944 and between D-Day and the liberation of Paris at the end of August 1944.
“May God bless our Veterans, the families and all those who paid the ultimate sacrifice as a result of the operations around D-Day and during the Battle of Normandy.”
Around 110 veterans were due to watch the unveiling of the British Normandy Memorial.
The survivors and 170 descendants of the dead will attend a special ceremony at National Memorial Arboretum in Burton-on-Trent, Staffs, where the official opening will be broadcast live from France.
Among them will be Bernard Morgan who, at 20, was the youngest RAF sergeant to go ashore on D-Day with 483 Group Control Centre.
Now 97, he says: “I was one of the lucky ones to survive. Waiting on our landing ship tank, I was in charge of a bren gun for two hours under a hail of shells.
“I lost three wireless operators in Normandy — two were 19 and one was 20.
Composed of 160 standing white stones, and made from 4,000 tonnes of stone, it is inscribed with the names of the soldiers who died.
Carved into it will be the names of every serviceman and woman, aged from 16 to 64, who died in northern France.
Their names appear in chronological order from June 6 to August 31, 1944.