From News Nation/AP:
“2020
finally ending, but New Year’s parties muted by virus”
This New Year’s
Eve is being celebrated like no other, with pandemic restrictions limiting
crowds and many people bidding farewell to a year they’d prefer to forget. As
the clock struck midnight across Asia and the South Pacific, the New Year’s
experience mirrored countries’ responses to the virus itself. Some canceled or
scaled back festivities, while others without active outbreaks were able to
carry on like any other year.
Australia was
among the first to ring in 2021 because of its proximity to the international
date line. In past years 1 million people crowded Sydney’s harbor to watch
fireworks. This time, most watched on television as authorities urged residents
to stay home and the most populous states, New South Wales and Victoria,
battled new outbreaks. Famous night spots were eerily deserted. The seven
minutes of pyrotechnics that lit up the Sydney Harbor Bridge and its
surroundings at midnight brought momentary cheer. Melbourne, Australia’s
second-most populated city, called off its annual fireworks show. In South
Korea, Seoul’s city government canceled its annual New Year’s Eve bell-ringing
ceremony in the Jongno neighborhood for the first time since the event was
first held in 1953, months after the end of the Korean War. The ceremony
normally draws an estimated 100,000 people.
Cities and
countries that have managed to control the virus got to celebrate. New Zealand,
which is two hours ahead of Sydney, and several of its South Pacific island
neighbors that also have no active COVID-19 cases held their usual New Year’s
activities. Taiwan also hosted its usual New Year’s celebration, a fireworks
display by its capital city’s iconic Taipei 101 tower. The island has
registered only seven deaths and 700 confirmed cases. In Chinese societies, the
virus ensured more muted celebrations of the solar New Year, which is less
widely observed than the Lunar New Year that in 2021 will fall in February.
Initial reports about a mystery respiratory illness sickening people in the
Chinese city of Wuhan emerged exactly a year ago. Much of Japan welcomed 2021
quietly at home, alarmed after Tokyo reported a record daily number of
confirmed coronavirus cases, topping 1,000 for the first time. Many skipped a
chance to return to ancestral homes for the holidays, hoping to lessen health
risks for extended families. Emperor Naruhito will deliver a video message for
the new year, instead of waving to cheering crowds from a balcony outside the
palace. Millions of Indians were ushering in the new year with subdued
celebrations at home because of night curfews, a ban on beach parties and
restrictions on movement in major cities and towns after the new, more
contagious variant of the virus reached the country. In New Delhi, Mumbai and
Chennai, hotels and bars were ordered to shut at 11 p.m. The cities have been
the worst hit by the pandemic. Drones were keeping watch on people’s movements
in Mumbai, India’s financial and entertainment capital. Large gatherings were
banned. Despite a surge in infections, the Gulf hub of Dubai pressed ahead with
its mass New Year’s Eve celebrations, including the annual fireworks show
around the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest tower. “People come to Dubai
because it’s open, but there are so many rules,” said Bashir Shehu, 50, who was
visiting from Abuja, Nigeria with his family. “We pray that next year we can
celebrate with some real freedom.”
In many
European countries, authorities warned they were ready to clamp down on
revelers who breached public health rules, including nightly curfews in Italy, Turkey,
Latvia and the Czech Republic. Some public celebrations were planned, such as a
fireworks display over Rome’s Coliseum, but officials urged people to enjoy
them from their balconies or — better yet — at home, on television. A few families gathered in Madrid’s sunny
central Puerta de Sol square to listen to the rehearsal of the traditional
ringing of the bells that is held at midnight. They followed the Spanish custom
of eating 12 grapes with each stroke of the bells before police cleared the
area that normally hosts thousands of revelers. The British government, trying
to juggle the twin challenges of a pandemic and the UK’s definitive split from
the EU, ran ads imploring the public to “see in the New Year safely at home.”
Most of England’s population is under lockdown measures in an attempt to slow
the spread of the new virus variant.
Many around the
world looked toward 2021 with hope, partly due to the arrival of vaccines that
offer a chance of beating the pandemic. While there won’t be crowds in Times
Square, the mayor pledged that the city which has over 25,000 deaths from the
virus would rebound next year. “We are turning the page and going someplace
better,” de Blasio said. In Israel’s coastal metropolis of Tel Aviv, flower
shop owner Billie Heyman reflected on how 2020 taught people to be “more
friendly and gentler with each other.” “Because, when we don’t have this, we
have nothing,” she said.
^ Hopefully
2021 will be a lot better than 2020 was. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/world/2020-finally-ending-but-new-years-parties-muted-by-virus/
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