A minute’s silence will be held across the UK tomorrow in memory of those who died in the Manchester bombing.

The Government announced the silence would take place at 11am following the death of 22 people in a suicide attack on Monday.

Flags will remain at half-mast on government buildings until the evening of May 25, said a statement released jointly by 10 Downing Street, the Foreign Office and the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.

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The silence will be followed by the resumption of local campaigning by most political parties, with the General Election contest restarting in full on Friday.

The victims of the bombing who have been named so far include eight-year-old Saffie Roussos from Leyland and teenagers Olivia Campbell, 15, from Bury and Georgina Callander from Chorley.

The attack at the Ariana Grande concert also injured 119 people.

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Salman Abedi was identified as the suicide bomber who carried out the attack and his brother and father have since been detained.

Abedi is believed to have travelled to Syria and had links with Islamic State, France’s interior minister has said.