The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Fireworks, prayers help ring in new year

-

From spectacula­r fireworks in Hong Kong and Australia to a huge LED lightshow at the world’s tallest building in Dubai, a look at how revelers around the world are ringing in 2018:

Australia

Fireworks lit up the sky above Sydney Harbor, highlighti­ng the city’s New Year’s celebratio­ns.

The massive fireworks display included a rainbow waterfall cascade of lights and color flowing off the harbor’s bridge to celebrate recently passed legislatio­n legalizing gay marriage in Australia.

Over a million people were expected to gather to watch the festivitie­s. Security was tight, but officials said there was no particular alert.

Sydney officials said the event would generate some $170 million for the city and “priceless publicity.” Nearly half the revelers were tourists.

New Zealand

Tens of thousands of New Zealanders took to streets and beaches, becoming among the first in the world to usher in 2018.

As the new year dawned in this southern hemisphere nation, fireworks boomed and crackled above city centers and harbors, and party-goers sang, hugged, danced and kissed.

In Auckland, New Zealand’s biggest city, tens of thousands gathered around Sky Tower as five minutes of nonstop pyrotechni­cs exploded from the top of the structure.

But on nearby Waiheke Island, 30 kilometers (20 miles) away, authoritie­s canceled the planned fireworks display because of drought conditions and low water supplies for firefighte­rs.

Vatican

Bidding 2017 farewell, Pope Francis has decried wars, injustices and environmen­tal decay which he says have “ruined” the year.

Francis on Sunday presided at a New Year’s Eve prayer service in St. Peter’s Basilica, a traditiona­l occasion to say thanks in each year’s last hours.

He says God gave to us a 2017 “whole and sound,” but that “we humans in many ways ruined and hurt it with works of death, lies and injustices.”

But, he added, “gratitude prevails” thanks to those “cooperatin­g silently for the common good.”

In keeping with past practice, the pope on New Year’s Day will celebrate Mass dedicated to the theme of world peace.

United Arab Emirates

Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building, has again served as the focal point of New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns — though this year authoritie­s decided against fireworks and chose a massive LED lightshow on the structure.

That was in part due to safety in the city-state in the United Arab Emirates, which saw a massive skyscraper fire on New Year’s Eve in 2015.

The display, running down the east side of the 2,716-foot)tower, showed Arabic calligraph­y, geometric designs and a portrait of the late Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, the UAE’s first president.

France

Tens of thousands of Parisians and tourists were heading to the Champs-Elysees to attend a firework show at Napoleon’s Arc de Triomphe monument, at the end of the avenue with its lines of trees sparkling with lights. Officials warned the display could be canceled due to a storm.

 ??  ??
 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Buddhists place candles during New Year celebratio­ns Jan. 1, at Jogyesa Buddhist temple in Seoul, South Korea.
AHN YOUNG-JOON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Buddhists place candles during New Year celebratio­ns Jan. 1, at Jogyesa Buddhist temple in Seoul, South Korea.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States