http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/features/bali-bombings-remembered-in-heart-of-london/

Bali Bombings Remembered in Heart of London 
Lives lost in Kuta are immortalized in the United Kingdom

By Simon Marcus Gower on 1:30 pm May 7, 2013.
Category Features, Travel
Tags: Bali bombings, London, memorial, terrorism, travel, United Kingdom 
 
A monument in London in memory of the victims of the 2002 Bali bombings. (JG 
Photo/Simon Marcus Gower)

London is a city of many monuments, memorials and landmarks. From triumphal 
arches, to statues of heroes, leaders and the famous, to Tower Bridge and Big 
Ben, many parts of London have rightly earned international acclaim.

But in one corner of the city stands a rather reserved, hushed memorial that is 
a fitting commemoration of lost lives. It is just a short walk from the Houses 
of Parliament and Big Ben, tucked behind the British Foreign and Commonwealth 
Office and across from St. James’s Park.

For those not familiar with the city, this means it is situated in a highly 
respected part of central London.

Respect is the key word here. It came as a surprise to Indonesian friends that 
this memorial includes the names of their compatriots, but this is a place that 
pays respect to all those who fell victim to the nightclub bombings in Kuta, 
Bali, on Oct. 12, 2002, regardless of nationality.

The memorial was established at the initiative of the UK Bali Bombing Victims 
Group, which sought to build it in 2005.

It was designed by artist Gary Breeze along with the sculptural work of Martin 
Cook and his son Matt.

The memorial was unveiled by Prince Charles and his wife, the Duchess of 
Cornwall, in October 2006. The British Foreign Office contributed 100,000 
pounds ($156,000), about a third of the total, with the balance coming from 
donations.

The memorial consists of a huge stone globe, seemingly rolled into place on a 
circular plinth set into the pavement. Behind this is a gently curved stone 
wall on which the names of the victims — who came from 21 countries — are 
listed.

Central are the names of the 28 British citizens killed in the blasts.

On the wall amid those names is a statement of what the memorial’s purpose: “In 
memory of the 202 innocent people killed by an act of terrorism in Kuta on the 
Island of Bali on the 12th of October 2002.”

On the circular plinth on which the stone globe stands are the words: “You were 
robbed of life. Your spirit enriches ours.”

This speaks to the tragic fact that so many young lives were taken in the 
blasts at Kuta nightspots. More than 200 people were also injured in the 
bombings.

Survivors’ memories of that terrible night cannot be conveyed by a memorial, 
but this sculpture does manage, gracefully and in a calming way, to remember 
those who died.

On the either side of the wall are stone seats used by people keen to sit and 
contemplate awhile. They are also a place to leave flowers to honor lost loved 
ones.

On the stone globe, simply carved, are representations of 202 doves, one for 
each of the victims.

London itself is no stranger to terror. In July 2005, an attack on the city’s 
transportation infrastructure killed 56 people. The attack added London to the 
list of locations that were sites of terrorism in the early 2000s, alongside 
Bali and New York, Madrid and Casablanca, among others.

London’s is one of several memorials to the victims of the Bali bombings, 
others being in Australia, Hong Kong and, of course, Bali.

It is a simple yet a deeply moving memorial and acts as a place of solace for 
victims’ families so far from Ba


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