Cheers, tears, prayers for 2020: A new decade is ushered in
NEW YORK
Fireworks burst and confetti fell as throngs of
revelers cheered the start of 2020 in New York City’s Times Square.
In one of the globe’s most-watched New Year’s Eve
spectacles, the crowd counted down the last seconds of 2019 as a luminescent
crystal ball descended down a pole.
About 3,000 pounds (1,360 kilograms) of confetti
showered the sea of attendees, many of whom were also briefly rained on earlier
in the evening as they waited in security pens for performances by stars
including rap-pop star Post Malone, K-pop group BTS, country singer Sam Hunt
and singer-songwriter Alanis Morissette.
The crowds packed into the heart of Manhattan
mouthed lyrics and waved yellow and purple balloons in a frenzy as midnight
approached.
“It was a dream, I wanted to do it so this year a
lot of people helped me to get here so I’m here, and I’m thankful for that,”
said Mariemma Mejias, 48, who flew to New York for the festivities from San
Juan, Puerto Rico.
The fun was evident, but some important global
issues were driven home as well.
Spotlighting efforts to combat climate change, high
school science teachers and students pressed the button that begins the famous
60-second ball drop and countdown to the new year.
RIO DE JANEIRO
About 3 million people welcomed 2020 at Brazil’s
iconic Copacabana beach as almost 34,000 pounds (15,420 kilograms) of colorful
fireworks went off for 14 minutes after midnight.
Rio de Janeiro holds one of the biggest New Year
parties in the world, with music, drinks and religious rituals on the shores.
Many dress in white in a traditional sign of their hope for peace. About 2,000
policemen are working to ensure party-goers are safe. Authorities say only
minor incidents have been reported so far.
Many locals and tourists are expected to stick
around Copacabana until Wednesday’s sunrise for their first dip of the year in
the ocean, expecting to wash away their troubles from 2019. Summer in Rio often
brings high temperatures early on.
The party in Sao Paulo, Brazil’s metropolis, took
about 2 million people to Paulista Avenue, the city’s main road. Nearly all the
6,000 pounds (2,720 kilograms) of fireworks used there were silent so pets did
not get too bothered by the noise.
PARIS
A joyful crowd of Parisians and tourists walked,
biked and used scooters to reach the Champs-Elysees for the new year
celebrations, in a city with almost no public transport amid massive strikes.
Revelers converged at the famous avenue to watch a
light show at the Arc de Triomphe, followed by a fireworks display at midnight.
Paris police set up a security perimeter around the Champs-Elysees area with a
ban on alcohol and traffic restrictions.
All metro lines in the French capital were closed
except for two automatic lines, and only a few night buses were running, as
Tuesday marked the 27th consecutive day of transport strikes against President
Emmanuel Macron’s plans to overhaul the French pension system.
ROME
Pope Francis delighted tourists and Romans in St. Peter’s
Square on Tuesday night when he took a stroll to admire the Nativity scene.
Shouts of “Pope! Pope!” and “Happy New Year!” resounded as families rushed to
catch a glimpse of him or thrust out their infant in hopes he would pat their
heads or pinch their cheeks.
One woman grabbed the pope’s hand and pulled him
toward her to shake it. Francis, 83, exclaimed and then struck the woman’s hand
twice to free his hand.
At a New Year’s Eve Vespers service in St. Peter’s
Basilica, Francis urged people to practice more solidarity and to “build
bridges, not walls.” Since becoming pontiff in 2013, Francis has preached
openness — a reform-minded agenda that has irritated a small but vocal group of
ultra-conservatives in the church.
HONG KONG
Revelers as well as pro-democracy protesters flocked
to sites across Hong Kong to usher in 2020.
The semi-autonomous Chinese city has toned down New
Year’s celebrations amid the monthslong demonstrations. The protests have
repeatedly sparked pitched battles with police and have taken their toll on
Hong Kong’s nightlife and travel industries.
A fireworks display that traditionally lights up
famed Victoria Harbor was canceled amid safety concerns, while some roads were
closed and barriers set up in the Lan Kwai Fong nightlife district to control
crowds.
RUSSIA
Russians began the world’s longest continuous New
Year’s Eve with fireworks and a message from President Vladimir Putin urging
them to work together in the coming year.
Putin made the call in a short speech broadcast on
television just before the stroke of midnight in each of Russia’s 11 time
zones. The recorded message was followed by an image of the Kremlin Clock and
the sound of its chimes. State TV showed footage of extensive festive fireworks
in cities of the Far East.
But one holiday tradition was missing in Moscow this
year — a picturesque layer of snow. The Russian capital has had an unusually
warm December and temperatures in central Moscow as midnight approached were
just above freezing.
AUSTRALIA
More than a million people descended on a hazy
Sydney Harbour and surrounding areas to ring in the new year despite the
ongoing wildfire crisis ravaging New South Wales, Australia’s most populous
state.
The 9 p.m. fireworks over Sydney’s iconic landmarks
was briefly delayed due to strong winds, but revelers clearly enjoyed
themselves in a desperately needed tonic for the state.
New South Wales has born the brunt of the wildfire
damage, which has razed more than 1,000 homes nationwide and killed 12 people
in the past few months.
NEW ZEALAND
New Zealand’s major cities greeted the new year with
fireworks as the nation appeared happy to be done with a year of challenges,
both natural and man-made.
On March 15, a lone gunman identified killed 51
people and wounded dozens at two mosques in the South Island city of
Christchurch. In December, an eruption of volcanic White Island off the east
coast of the North Island killed at least 19 tourists and tour guides.
SAMOA
Fireworks erupted at midnight from Mount Vaea,
overlooking the capital, Apia. The end of the year celebration was a time of
sadness and remembrance.
A measles epidemic in late 2019 claimed 81 lives,
mostly children under 5.
More than 5,600 measles cases were recorded in the
nation of just under 200,000. With the epidemic now contained, the Samoa
Observer newspaper named as its Person of the Year health workers who fought
the outbreak.
LONDON
Londoners watched a spectacular fireworks display
from the banks of the River Thames that was launched from the London Eye and
barges near Parliament.
The familiar chimes of London’s Big Ben clock tower
rung in the new year, even though they have been silent for most of 2019
because of extensive restoration work.
To the north, the multi-day Hogmanay New Year’s
celebrations in Edinburgh began Monday night with a torchlight parade through
the streets of the Scottish capital.
Security was tight in both cities and elsewhere in
Britain following a recent extremist attack on London Bridge that claimed two
lives. Police arrested five men on suspicion of terrorism offenses Monday but
said the arrests were not related to the London Bridge attack or to
celebrations.
SOUTH AFRICA
Thousands of revelers gathered at Cape Town’s
Waterfront area to ring in the new year with music, dancing and fireworks in
front of the city’s iconic Table Mountain.
In past years, residents of Johannesburg’s poor
Hillbrow neighborhood would celebrate the New Year by tossing furniture,
appliances and even refrigerators from the balconies of high-rise apartment
buildings. Police have issued stern warnings, and it appears the dangerous
tradition has declined.
In a somber statement, President Cyril Ramaphosa
said “while our economy created jobs, these have not been nearly enough to stop
the rise in unemployment or the deepening of poverty.”
South African singer Yvonne Chaka Chaka was deported
from Uganda, where she was to perform at a New Year’s Eve event. Ugandan police
cited visa issues, but Ugandan media reported it was because she had voiced
support for Ugandan pop star Bobi Wine, the most potent opposition challenger
to President Yoweri Museveni.
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
For nearly 10 minutes, fireworks lit the sky over
Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building, as hundreds of thousands
gathered downtown to watch the spectacular display.
The New Year’s Eve display at the 828-meter-tall
(2,716-foot-tall) skyscraper was just one of seven different fireworks shows
across the emirate. Tourists, especially from Europe and Russia, flocked to the
sunny beaches of Dubai at this time of year to escape the cold, dark winter.
To keep the massive crowds safe, police created
walkways around the Burj Khalifa tower for male-only groups to separate them
from families and women.
Dubai this year will be hosting Expo 2020, a world
fair that brings the most cutting-edge and futuristic technologies.
JAPAN
People flocked to temples and shrines in Japan, offering
incense with their prayers to celebrate the passing of a year and the the first
New Year’s of the Reiwa era.
Under Japan’s old-style calendar, linked to
emperors’ rules, Reiwa started in May, after Emperor Akihito stepped down and
his son Naruhito became emperor. Although Reiwa is entering its second year
with 2020, Jan. 1 still marks Reiwa’s first New Year’s, the most important
holiday in Japan.
Stalls at Zojoji Temple in Tokyo sold sweet rice
wine, fried noodles and candied apples, as well as little amulets in the shape
of mice, the zodiac animal for 2020. Since the Year of the Mouse starts off the
Asian zodiac, it’s associated with starting anew.
Tokyo will host the 2020 Summer Olympics, an event
that is creating much anticipation for the entire nation.
INDONESIA
Tens of thousands of revelers in Indonesia’s capital
of Jakarta were soaked by torrential rains as they waited for New Year’s Eve
fireworks while others in the country were wary of an active volcano.
Festive events along coastal areas near the Sunda
Strait were dampened by a possible larger eruption of Anak Krakatau, an island
volcano that erupted last year just ahead of Christmas Day, triggering a
tsunami that killed more than 430 people.
The country’s volcanology agency has warned locals
and tourists to stay 2 kilometers (1.3 miles) from the volcano’s crater
following an eruption Tuesday that blasted ash and debris up to 2,000 meters
(6,560 feet) into the air.
SOUTH KOREA
Thousands of South Koreans filled cold downtown
streets in Seoul ahead of a traditional bell-tolling ceremony near City Hall to
send off an exhausting 2019 highlighted by political scandals, decaying job
markets and crumbling diplomacy with North Korea.
Dignitaries ringing the old Bosingak bell at
midnight included South Korean Major League Baseball pitcher Hyun-Jin Ryu and
Pengsoo, a giant penguin character with a gruff voice and blunt personality
that emerged as one of the country’s biggest TV stars in 2019.
GERMANY
Hundreds of thousands of revelers were expected to
ring in the New Year in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin.
Several German cities including Munich and Hamburg
have banned private fireworks amid concerns about the danger and environmental
impacts from the increasingly powerful fireworks. A recent poll by the Forsa
research institute found 59% of Germans would support a ban on private
fireworks in city centers, while 37% were opposed.
LAS VEGAS
Tourism officials expected more than 300,000
revelers for fireworks fired at midnight from atop seven casinos on the
resort-lined Las Vegas Strip. Thousands more were expected for live music and
an LED light and sound show at the downtown Fremont Street Experience
pedestrian mall.
“I tell people to expect one of the better fireworks
they’re ever going to see,” said Michael Austin, a country music singer from
Nashville, Tennessee, who was booked to perform in Las Vegas. “Swarms of people
getting along, bringing in the new year.”
Juan and Isabel Tinajero, making their first family
visit to Las Vegas, said they hoped 2020 brings less stress than 2019.
“I expect a great show,” Juan Tinajero said as
Isabel pushed a stroller along the Las Vegas Strip sidewalk. “It’s Vegas,
right?”
HONOLULU
Revelers packed beaches from Waikiki to the Big
Island as Hawaii residents and visitors prepared to ring in the new decade.
A strong winter swell brought heavy waves to north-
and west-facing shores of the islands Monday, nearly triggering the iconic
Waimea Bay big wave contest named after Hawaiian surfing legend Eddie Aikau.
The waves weren’t quite big enough for the green
light on the North Shore Oahu surfing competition, but waters across the
archipelago saw above-average sets of rollers that some surfers took full
advantage of.
On Oahu, people packed the streets of Waikiki, where
a fireworks display would welcome 2020. But across the island at Ko Olina and
Turtle Bay resorts, people gathered to the sounds of bumping music as tiki
torches burned along walkways.
Comedian Bill Maher was spotted leaving one hotel as
he prepared for his annual comedy show in Honolulu.
Fireworks displays both big and small were expected
across the islands as the sanctioned shows competed with the less legal
versions of the explosive festivities in neighborhoods on every island.
At Ko Olina Resort on Oahu’s west side, people
watched sun dip below the horizon of the Pacific as the sky turned shades of
orange and red before a deep blue sky took over. A traditional Hawaii luau was
set for later in the evening, with fire and hula dancers set to entertain the
crowds.