The attacks took the lives of 60 people, including 31 Britons.
Prince Harry made a solemn tribute to the Britons who lost their lives in two terrorist attacks in Tunisia on Monday.
Harry, 34, went to Birmingham, in the English Midlands, to attend a dedication ceremony of the official memorial to the victims of two terrorist attacks that took place in Tunisia in 2015.
Overlooking the boating lake in Cannon Hill Park, the main sculpture is called “Infinite Wave” – a single wave consisting of 31 individual streams. Together, they represent the British nationals killed in the Bardo Museum attack in March 2015 and the Sousse attack in June 2015. The two attacks killed 60 people total.
Seven people were sentenced to life in prison in February for the attacks. The families of the deceased were consulted on plans for the memorial that Harry visited Monday. The U.K.’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office hopes the site will be a place of “remembrance, commemoration and reflection for the families of those injured and killed.”
In 2016, Harry gave a reading from the Bible when he attended a Service of Solemn Commemoration at Westminster Abbey for the victims of the 2015 attacks.
It is his first official event since returning from Morocco with wife Meghan Markle last week.