The Guardian Australia

‘We worked alongside our worries’: Myanmar resumes hot-air balloon festival

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Thousands of people have gathered in the hills of central Myanmar for the annual Tazaungdai­ng light festival marking the end of the rainy season with a fiery display of exploding hot-air balloons.

The celebratio­n in the former British hill station of Pyin Oo Lwin has not been held for two years because of the Covid pandemic and unrest after a military coup.

But on Sunday night, rival teams began launching 76 aerial artistic creations that will take flight over the next five days, competing for marks in aesthetics, teamwork, height reached and time spent in the air.

Their balloons are propelled upwards to about 100 metres (320ft) using the heat from a fire before fireworks inside explode, obliterati­ng months of work in a spectacula­r burst of lights across the dark sky.

The festivitie­s are a rare respite from the economic misery and violence gripping much of the country almost two years after the military’s power grab.

“We are holding our festival here but we are sorry for what is happening elsewhere,” said Aung Myat Thu, 37, who had spent months working with friends on their balloon. “When we were preparing for the competitio­n, we all worked alongside our worries.”

The hot-air balloons featured an array of artworks, from images of Buddha to traditiona­l motifs, with one made in the shape of a polar bear.

Some participan­ts hooked dozens of red, white and yellow candles to their balloons before releasing them into the chilly night air, to huge cheers.

While the Tazaungdai­ng tradition is rooted in Buddhism, the hot-air balloon contest was started by British colonialis­ts in the late 19th century. Previous editions have drawn tens of thousands of local and foreign visitors, attracted by the colour – and danger – of the gathering.

The balloons are loaded with fireworks, and any miscalcula­tion on when to light the rockets can result in catastroph­e.

In 2014, three people were killed at Tazaungdai­ng celebratio­ns in Taunggyi, in the neighbouri­ng Shan state, when a balloon crashed on to spectators below.

Tin Mar Lwin, 41, was beaming on Sunday night after sending off her balloon, which was decorated with a huge red and gold Buddha seated on a lotus leaf. “I want the situation to be stable like this,” she told AFP of her country. “I want peace. I’m hoping for it. I’m happy coming to this event.”

 ?? Photograph: AFP/Getty Images ?? A hot-air balloon carrying fireworks is released during the Tazaungdai­ng light festival at Pyin Oo Lwin in Mandalay, Burma, on Sunday.
Photograph: AFP/Getty Images A hot-air balloon carrying fireworks is released during the Tazaungdai­ng light festival at Pyin Oo Lwin in Mandalay, Burma, on Sunday.
 ?? Photograph: AFP/Getty Images ?? People preparing lanterns to attach to hot-air balloons during the Tazaungdai­ng light festival at Pyin Oo Lwin in Mandalay on 6 November.
Photograph: AFP/Getty Images People preparing lanterns to attach to hot-air balloons during the Tazaungdai­ng light festival at Pyin Oo Lwin in Mandalay on 6 November.

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