Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

World prepares to welcome New Year despite terror fears

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AFP: Global New Year’s Eve festivitie­s are set to begin under tightened security, with Brussels scrapping celebratio­ns as fears of jihadist threats cast a pall, just weeks after brutal attacks in Paris.

Australia’s biggest city, Sydney, traditiona­lly the first to host a major event to ring in the New Year, held its 9:00pm (1000 GMT) family fireworks, with pyrotechni­cs exploding over the harbour ahead of the main show at midnight.

Crowds thronged to vantage points to see the displays which are expected to draw one million people, ahead of the chimes of midnight moving across Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Europe and finally the Americas.

Hong Kong, Beijing, Singapore and other Asian cities may rival Sydney’s pyrotechni­c splash, but Brunei offers a sober evening after banning Christmas in a shift to hardline Islamic law.

Jakarta remains on high alert after antiterror police foiled detailed plans for an alleged New Year suicide attack in the Indonesian capital.

High security in Europe

At the heart of Europe, annual festivitie­s and fireworks in Brussels have been cancelled as the Belgian capital -- home to NATO and the European Union -- remains on high alert.

“It’s better not to take any risks,” mayor Yvan Mayeur said Wednesday after police arrested two people suspected of plotting to launch attacks during the festivitie­s at Brussels landmarks.

The French capital, still reeling from the November 13 slaughter of 130 people, has also cancelled its fireworks display.

But authoritie­s agreed France’s biggest public gathering since the attacks can go ahead on the Champs Elysees avenue, with bolstered security.

“The people of Paris and France need this symbolic passage into the New Year,” said Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo.

“After what our city has lived through, we have to send a signal to the world,” she told the weekly Journal du Dimanche.

In Turkey, police have detained two Islamic State suspects allegedly planning to stage attacks in the centre of Ankara which is expected to be packed on New Year’s Eve.

Meanwhile, in Moscow police will for the first time close off Red Square where tens of thousands of revellers traditiona­lly gather.

“It’s no secret that Moscow is one of the choice targets for terrorists,” Moscow mayor Sergei Sobyanin said recently.

In Britain, Scotland Yard said there will be around 3,000 officers across central London in what is reported to be an unpreceden­ted antiterror security effort.

“Our plans are purely precaution­ary and not as a result of any specific intelligen­ce,” said Superinten­dent Jo Edwards, spokeswoma­n for Scotland Yard.

Fireworks were banned in towns and cities across Italy, in some cases because of a recent spike in air pollution but also because of fears that, in the current climate, sudden loud bangs could cause crowds to panic.

The number of police on duty in Italy has been increased by 30 percent compared to last year although the Interior Ministry stressed: “There has been no specific alert.”

In Madrid, thousands of people will flock to Puerta del Sol square, however police will limit the number allowed in to just 25,000.

Berliners will do better with about a million

expected at the Brandenbur­g Gate for a free mega-street party.

Party at the pyramids

Cairo meanwhile is trying desperatel­y to attract tourists to bolster the economy.

The government is staging celebratio­ns in front of the pyramids near the Egyptian capital, with ambassador­s, artists and intellectu­als all invited.

Egypt has been in turmoil since the 2011 uprising but was further hit by the October 31 crash of a Russian airliner over the Sinai killing 224 people.

On the nearby Gaza Strip, the Islamist group Hamas has banned public New Year’s Eve parties.

Police spokesman Ayman al-batinji told AFP such celebratio­ns were “incompatib­le with our customs, traditions, values and the teachings of our religion”.

In stark contrast, Sierra Leone’s capital Freetown is hoping to reclaim its mantle as host of the best beach parties in Africa after Ebola scared people away.

The city of 1.2 million was deserted 12 months ago during the worst Ebola outbreak ever recorded.

“This New Year’s Eve I am going to dance and party until the cock crows,” said 35-yearold Franklyn Smith.

Celebratio­ns away from the palm-fringed beaches will be muted, however, as people remember almost 4,000 victims of the epidemic.

In the Philippine­s, stray bullets and exploding firecracke­rs killed one person and injured almost 200 others as the country plunged into its annual chaotic revelry.

In New York, despite a pledge of tight security for Times Square, another million people are expected to turn out to see the ball descend.

This year’s show includes performanc­es by artists Demi Lovato, Daya and Jessie J.

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