A MINUTE’S silence was held in Central Station to remember the 22 victims of the Manchester Arena atrocity one year on.

The busy station came to a standstill as staff and passengers gathered reverently on the platform.

Elsewhere, an emotional national commemoration service was held to mark the first anniversary.

Some 800 people attended the hour-long service at Manchester Cathedral yesterday including families or friends of the victims and also survivors of the May 22 terror attack.

They were joined by front-line responders and volunteers who helped in the tragic aftermath of the end of last year’s Ariana Grande concert.

Among the dignitaries who were present were the Duke of Cambridge, Prime Minister Theresa May, Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon, Lib Dem leader Sir Vince Cable, Greater Manchester Chief Constable Ian Hopkins, Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham and Sir Richard Leese, the leader of Manchester City Council.

A one-minute silence – observed nationwide – was held at 2.30pm with tears inside the cathedral and outside, where thousands watched on a big screen in nearby Cathedral Gardens.

Photographs of those who died in the bombing were displayed on screens in the cathedral shortly before the silence.

Twenty-two lit candles on the altar represented each one of the victims, which were made using wax from the thousands of candles left in St Ann’s Square in their memory last May.

A larger single lit candle remembered bereaved families and friends, the hundreds who were physically or psychologically injured and their families and friends, those who helped on the night and those who have assisted or supported the community in their recovery.

Officiating the service, the Dean of Manchester, the Very Rev Rogers Govender, said: “In this service we come together as people of different faiths and none, as we remember with love before God those whose lives were lost, and those whose lives have been changed forever and have to live with the terrible memories of that day 12 months ago.

“There is a land of the living and a land of the dead, and the bridge between them is love, the only survival, the only meaning.”

He added: “Everyone was loved so very dearly by people who are here today as well as by those who are not.

“They will live on through those who love them... Those lost and their loved ones will forever be in the hearts of the people of Manchester.”