Manila Bulletin

Migration, mega-fines and Barbie: 2023 in records

- By JANET MCEVOY

PARIS, France (AFP) – Sizzling temperatur­es, millions fleeing their homes, multitudes flocking to a movie about a doll – 2023 was another year of extremes.

The great displaceme­nt

The number of people around the world displaced by conflict or humanitari­an crises was already at a record high before the Israel-gaza war began on Oct. 7, adding to the misery.

By the end of September, 114 million people had been driven from their homes by wars in Ukraine, Sudan, Myanmar and the Democratic Republic of Congo and a humanitari­an crisis in Taliban-run Afghanista­n, among other factors, according to UN refugee agency the UNHCR.

They have since been joined by at least 1.9 million Gazans.

Hot as hell

One heat record after another tumbled in 2023, which is on course to be the hottest year on record, according to the European Union's climate monitor Copernicus.

The northern hemisphere had its hottest summer ever and temperatur­e records were also smashed in the southern winter, with the Argentinia­n capital Buenos Aires experienci­ng its warmest Aug. 1 on record at 30 degrees Celsius.

Rugby glory

Defending champions South Africa won a nail-biting final 12-11 against New Zealand in the Rugby World Cup, to claim a record fourth title and seal the growing role of rugby – once the sport of the white minority under apartheid – as a unifying force in multiracia­l South Africa.

“People who are not from South Africa don't understand what it means for our country. It is not just about the game. Our country goes through such a lot,” captain Siya Kolisi said.

Indians outnumber Chinese

India overtook China to become the world’s most populous country in mid2023, accounting for nearly 1.43 billion of Earth’s eight billion humans, according to the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs.

After peaking in 2022 at 1.426 billion, China’s population has started to fall for the first time in six decades. By 2100 its population might be only half that of India, experts say.

Fossil fuel frenzy

Bad news for the climate: global consumptio­n of coal, the dirtiest of all fossil fuels, hit an all-time high of 8.5 billion tons in 2023, the IEA energy watchdog said.

But for the first time ever, nations participat­ing in the UN'S annual climate summit agreed to “transition away” from coal, oil and gas.

Billion-dollar Barbie

Cinemas got a much-needed postpandem­ic boost when Greta Gerwig’s blockbuste­r “Barbie” hit theatres worldwide with Margot Robbie as Mattel's iconic doll.

The film hit the billion-dollar box office mark faster than any film in Warner Bros.’ 100-year history and made Gerwig the highest-grossing woman director ever.

Tennis titan

Serbian tennis legend Novak Djokovic continued his age-defying heroics by adding three more Grand Slams to his collection – the Australian

Open, the French Open, and the US Open – giving him a record 24 men’s singles titles, ahead of Spain’s Rafael Nadal on 22.

He is now joint record-holder for men and women with Australia’s Margaret Court who won 24 singles Grand Slams in the 1960s and 1970s.

Mercury mania

A record 2,000 bidders from 61 countries registered to take part when the piano that Queen frontman Freddie Mercury used to compose almost all of his greatest songs, and the original manuscript for “Bohemian Rhapsody,” went under the hammer in London in September.

The baby grand was snapped up for over £3 million as part of the megaauctio­n of Mercury memorabili­a that included items as diverse as a moustache comb and the door to Mercury’s garden.

Facebook mega-fine

The European Union this year ratcheted up its battle with Big Tech over privacy and other breaches.

Facebook was hit with a record penalty of 1.2 billion euros ($1.3 billion) in Ireland for illegally transferri­ng personal data between Europe and the United States, in breach of EU rules requiring Europeans to consent to the ways in which their data is used.

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