Gulf Today

World welcomes new year amid wildfires and protests

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As million revellers thronged Sydney harbour to watch New Year fireworks, thousands sought refuge from the bushfires on beaches; festive mood in Hong Kong and India was dampened by anti-govt protests

The world rang in the new year on Wednesday with spectacula­r firework displays from Sydney to Tokyo, though celebratio­ns in Australia were overshadow­ed by deadly wildfires and the festive mood in Hong Kong and India was dampened by protests.

Around a million revellers thronged Sydney harbour and nearby districts to watch more than 100,000 fireworks explode above the city, even as thousands of people along Australia’s eastern seaboard sought refuge from the bushfires on beaches.

Thousands of Hong Kongers welcoming 2020 on neon-lit promenades in the picturesqu­e Victoria Harbour broke into pro-democracy chants shortly after the countdown to midnight.

Hong Kong authoritie­s cancelled the main midnight fireworks display for the first time in a decade, citing security concerns.

A “Symphony of Lights” took place instead, involving projection­s on the city’s tallest skyscraper­s, while smaller-scale pyrotechni­cs were launched from waterfront rooftops.

Sydney decided to press ahead with its fireworks despite calls by some members of the public for it to be cancelled in solidarity with fire-hit areas in New South Wales, of which the city is the capital.

Sydney mayor Clover Moore said planning had begun 15 months ago and that the event also gave a boost to the economy.

Some other towns in eastern Australia cancelled their new year celebratio­ns as naval vessels and military helicopter­s helped firefighte­rs rescue people fleeing the fires, which have turned swathes of New South Wales into a raging furnace.

The fires have killed at least 11 people since October, two of them overnight into Tuesday, destroyed more than 4 million hectares and left many towns and rural areas without electricit­y or mobile coverage.

Fuelled by searing temperatur­es and high winds, more than 200 fires are now burning across the southeaste­rn states of New South Wales and Victoria, threatenin­g several towns and snapping their power, mobile and internet links.

“This is absolutely one of the worst fire seasons we’ve seen,” Shane Fitzsimmon­s, commission­er of the NSW Rural Fire Service, told a briefing in Sydney.

Authoritie­s said the main firefront was moving up the coast and warned those in its path to seek shelter close to the beach.

About 4,000 people in the town of Mallacoota in Victoria headed to the waterfront after the main road was cut off. Those who could not make it there scrambled for shelter in a gymnasium and other public buildings, as emergency sirens wailed.

Some of those trapped in the town posted images of blood-red, smoke-filled skies on social media. One beachfront photograph showed people lying shoulder-to-shoulder on the sand, some wearing gas masks.

Elsewhere, revellers from Auckland in New Zealand to Pyongyang, capital of isolated North Korea, welcomed the new year with firework displays. In Japan, people took turns to strike Buddhist temple bells, in accordance with tradition.

In Hong Kong, rocked by months of sometimes violent pro-democracy demonstrat­ions, protesters were urged to wear masks at a New Year rally called “Don’t forget 2019 — Persist in 2020”, according to social media posts.

“This year there are no fireworks, but there will probably be tear gas somewhere,” said 25-year-old IT worker Sam. “For us it’s not really New Year’s Eve. We have to resist every day.”

Some 6,000 police were deployed and Chief Executive Carrie Lam appealed for calm and reconcilia­tion in her New Year’s Eve video message.

The protests began in June in response to a now-withdrawn bill that would have allowed extraditio­ns to mainland China, where courts are controlled by the Communist Party, and have evolved into a broader pro-democracy movement.

Thousands of Indians also planned to greet the new year with protests, angered by a new citizenshi­p law that they say will chip away at India’s secular constituti­on.

Demonstrat­ions were planned in New Delhi, in the grip of its second coldest winter in more than a century, as well as Mumbai and other cities.

 ?? Reuters ?? ↑ The midnight fireworks are seen from Mrs Macquarie’s Chair during New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns in Sydney on Wednesday.
Reuters ↑ The midnight fireworks are seen from Mrs Macquarie’s Chair during New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns in Sydney on Wednesday.

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