Commemorative events were held throughout the world. In South Korea, where he is attending the G20 summit, the prime minister, David Cameron, laid a wreath at the site of the Battle of the Imjin River, scene of the army's bloodiest battle since the end of the first world war. Here, during the Korean War in 1951 the 1st Battalion, Gloucestershire Regiment, saw 59 men killed in action and 180 wounded, as well as 526 taken prisoner, of whom 34 died in captivity.
Hundreds gathered at the Menin Gate in Ypres, Belgium, under the names of the 54,389 UK and Commonwealth soldiers who fell during the first world war and whose graves are unknown.
However, in London a small group of protesters calling themselves Muslims Against Crusades burned a model of a poppy and chanted "British soldiers burn in hell." Waving banners which read "Islam will dominate" and "Our dead are in paradise, your dead are in hell", they were kept apart by police from a group of around 50 counter-protesters.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/nov/11/armistice-day-silence-britain-remembrance