Commemoration 20 years after Oklahoma

The 20th anniversary of the Oklahoma bombing has been marked with a service attended by about 1000 people.

A woman stands in the middle of the 168 chairs representing the people killed in the bombing during the Remembrance Ceremony for the 20th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing (EPA/LARRY W. SMITH)

A woman stands in the middle of the 168 chairs representing the people killed in the bombing during the Remembrance Ceremony for the 20th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing (EPA/LARRY W. SMITH)

About 1000 people have gathered to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing, which was the deadliest terrorist attack on US soil until the September 11 attacks six years later.

Former President Bill Clinton and Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin were among those who spoke at Sunday's service at the Oklahoma City National Memorial, where the Alfred P Murrah Federal Building once stood.

The service started with a 168-second moment of silence to honour each of the 168 people who died in the April 19, 1995, attack. It concluded about 90 minutes later with survivors and tearful relatives of the dead reading the names of those killed.

"This was a place of unspeakable horror and tragedy," Frank Keating, who was Oklahoma's governor at the time of the attack, told the gathering. He called the attack "unforgivable."

Timothy McVeigh, an Army veteran with strong anti-government views, planned the bombing as revenge for the deadly stand-off between the FBI and the Branch Davidian sect in Waco, Texas, that killed more than 70 people on April 19, 1993 - exactly two years earlier.

McVeigh was convicted on federal murder and conspiracy charges in 1997 and executed in 2001.

His Army buddy, Terry Nichols, was convicted on federal and state bombing-related charges and is serving multiple life sentences in a federal prison.


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Source: AAP



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