Orlando Sentinel

Sorrow and fear amid hope for 2022

Celebratio­ns subdued across globe as virus keeps filling hospitals

- By John Leicester and Nick Perry

PARIS — Sorrow for the dead and dying, fear of more infections to come and hopes for an end to the coronaviru­s pandemic were — again — the bitterswee­t cocktail with which the world said good riddance to 2021 and ushered in 2022.

New Year’s Eve, which used to be celebrated globally with a free-spirited wildness, felt instead like a case of deja vu, with the fast-spreading omicron variant again filling hospitals.

At the La Timone hospital in the southern French city of Marseille, Dr. Fouad Bouzana could only sigh Friday when asked what 2022 might bring.

“Big question,” he said. “It’s starting to become exhausting, because the waves come one after another.”

The pandemic gamechange­r of 2021 — vaccinatio­ns — continued apace, with some people getting jabs while others stocked up on drinks and treats for subdued feasting. Some milestones were met: Pakistan said it had fully vaccinated 70 million of its 220 million people this year and Britain said it met its goal of offering a vaccine booster shot to all adults by Friday.

In Russia, President Vladimir Putin mourned the dead, praised Russians for their strength in difficult times and soberly warned that the pandemic “isn’t retreating yet.” Russia’s virus task force has reported 308,860 COVID-19 deaths but its state statistics agency says the death toll has been more than double that.

“I would like to express words of sincere support to all those who lost their dear

ones,” Putin said in a televised address broadcast just before midnight.

Elsewhere, the venue that many chose for New Year’s celebratio­ns was the same place they became overly familiarly with during lockdowns: their homes. Because of omicron’s virulence, cities canceled traditiona­l New Year’s Eve concerts and fireworks displays to avoid drawing large crowds.

Pope Francis also canceled his New Year’s Eve tradition of visiting the life-size manger set up in St. Peter’s Square, again to avoid a crowd. In an unusual move for Francis, the 85-year-old pontiff donned a surgical mask for a Vespers service of prayer and hymns Friday evening. But he also delivered a homily standing and unmasked.

Face masks again became mandatory Friday on the streets of Paris, a rule widely ignored among afternoon crowds that thronged the sunbathed Champs-Elysees, where a planned fireworks display was canceled. With nearly 50% of Paris-region intensive care beds filled by COVID-19 patients, hospitals were ordered to postpone nonessenti­al surgeries.

Yet boisterous New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns kicked off in the Serbian capital of Belgrade where, unlike elsewhere in Europe, mass gatherings were allowed despite fears of the omicron variant. Large crowds gathered Friday evening for outdoor concerts, fireworks and a light show, and hotels and bars were packed. One medical expert predicted that Serbia will see thousands of

new COVID-19 infections after the holidays.

More than 300,000 visitors were expected in Las Vegas for events including a New Year’s Eve fireworks show on the Strip that was canceled last year due to the pandemic.

In Japan, people thronged temples and shrines, most of them wearing masks. Some shrugged off the virus, dining and drinking in downtown Tokyo and flocking to shops, celebratin­g being freed from recent virus restrictio­ns.

In South Korea’s capital, Seoul, the annual New Year’s Eve bell-ringing ceremony was canceled for the second straight year due to a surge in cases, and a pre-recorded video was instead broadcast online and on television.

South Korean authoritie­s also closed many beaches and other tourist attraction­s along the east coast, which usually swarm with people hoping to catch the year’s first sunrise, and extended tough distancing rules for another two weeks.

In India, millions of people rang in the new year from their homes, with nighttime curfews and other restrictio­ns taking the fizz out of celebratio­ns in New Delhi, Mumbai and other large cities. Authoritie­s have imposed restrictio­ns to keep revelers away from restaurant­s, hotels, beaches and bars amid a surge in cases fueled by omicron.

Many Indonesian­s were also forgoing their usual festivitie­s for a quieter evening at home, after the government banned many New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns.

In Hong Kong, a New Year’s Eve concert featuring local celebritie­s including boy band Mirror was the first big New Year’s Eve event since 2018, after events were canceled in 2019 due to political strife and last year because of the pandemic.

In mainland China, the Shanghai government canceled an annual light show along the Huangpu River that usually draws hundreds of thousands of spectators. There were no plans for public festivitie­s in Beijing, where popular temples have been closed or had limited access since mid-December.

In the Philippine­s, a typhoon two weeks ago wiped out basic necessitie­s for tens of thousands of people ahead of New Year’s Eve. More than 400 were killed by Typhoon Rai and at least 82 remain missing.

 ?? K.M. CHAUDARY/AP ?? Students participat­e in a demonstrat­ion Friday to say goodbye to 2021 in Lahore, Pakistan.
K.M. CHAUDARY/AP Students participat­e in a demonstrat­ion Friday to say goodbye to 2021 in Lahore, Pakistan.

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