Royal Family and Armed Forces can’t sing God Save The Queen on Armistice Day because of Covid rules


MEMBERS of the Royal Family and the Armed Forces will not be allowed to sing God Save The Queen on Armistice Day because of coronavirus rules.

The new guidelines will be in place at Westminster Abbey on November 11 due to the “potential for increased risk of transmission from aerosol and droplets”.

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Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Queen Elizabeth II and Kate, Duchess of Cambridge,watch from a balcony at the Cenotaph on Whitehall last year

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Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Queen Elizabeth II and Kate, Duchess of Cambridge,watch from a balcony at the Cenotaph on Whitehall last yearCredit: AFP or licensors
Boris Johnson lays a wreath in Wolverhampton last year

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Boris Johnson lays a wreath in Wolverhampton last yearCredit: AFP

A spokesman for Westminster Abbey said only members of the social-distanced choir will be able to sing, reports the Daily Mail.

The ruling comes after the Government banned “communal singing” due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Former Conservative leader Sir Ian Duncan-Smith said: “If the Government and the British Legion limit Remembrance Sunday to the point that it becomes pointless, then we have to ask ourselves: what they did they die for?”

Only 30 veterans will be able to go the service at the Cenotaph on Whitehall this year, while all members of the public will be excluded.

The Met Police will put up screens around the service to stop sightseers.

The Department of Culture - based on advice from Public Health England - said that only the Choir of the Chapel Royal would be allowed to sing the national anthem and the hymn O God Our Help In Ages Past.

While singing will be banned at Westminster Abbey, the Royal Family will be able to sing God Save The Queen at the Cenotaph.

The rules remain unclear for ceremonies at other war memorial services around Britain.

Merchant Navy Association president Vivien Foster, who has laid a wreath at the Cenotaph for the past 20 years, criticised the rules.

She said: “The whole situation is farcical.”

Military veterans at the Cenotaph last year

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Military veterans at the Cenotaph last yearCredit: AFP or licensors
Former Army Staff Sergeant Dennis Woollons, 94, unable to collect for Poppy Appeal due to Covid 





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