How the World welcome Year 2016

Kayode Ogundele
Kayode Ogundele
Revellers in Japan released balloons in front of Tokyo Tower

Countries around the world are marking the New Year, with festivities under way in the US and Canada.

In New York, a million people converged on Times Square, amid tight security, to watch the famous ball descend.

In Brazil, crowds packed Rio’s de Janeiro’s famous Copacabana beach to watch a spectacular firework display.

Earlier, European cities ushered in 2016 – despite heightened security measures in some countries.

In Japan, people released balloons by Tokyo Tower, while South Koreans celebrated with traditional bell-ringing.

Revellers in Australia and New Zealand were among the first to welcome 2016.

Revellers in Japan released balloons in front of Tokyo Tower
Revellers in Japan released balloons in front of Tokyo Tower

Crowds counted down at Auckland’s Sky Tower in New Zealand, with a laser show and fireworks display. Fireworks also lit up Sydney harbour in Australia.

In London, more than 100,000 people watched the fireworks display by the River Thames with thousands of extra police officers on duty.

A special New Year artwork in Amritsar, India
A special New Year artwork in Amritsar, India

In the Scottish capital, Edinburgh, the traditional Hogmanay party received a New Year message from British astronaut Tim Peake who was broadcasting live from the International Space Station.

In Berlin, fireworks were held at the Brandenburg Gate, with one million people estimated to have attended the countdown. The celebrations took place as police in Munich warned of a planned terror attack and asked people to avoid crowds.

Celebrations were held in Paris despite the terror attacks of 2015
Celebrations were held in Paris despite the terror attacks of 2015

In Paris, the traditional fireworks display was cancelled to be replaced by a five-minute video performance at the Arc de Triomphe just before midnight. The screening was relayed on screens along the Champs-Elysees.

The city’s mayor, Anne Hidalgo, said the video was intended to send “the world the message that Paris is standing, proud of its lifestyle and living together”.

Earlier, President Hollande in a New Year’s Eve address to the nation said that his country “has not finished with terrorism yet”, six weeks after gunmen and suicide bombers killed 130 people in Paris.

In one of the more innovative celebrations, four divers equipped with musical instruments and breathing apparatus performed an underwater “concert” in a fish tank in Yantai, east China.

Festivities went ahead in Dubai despite a fire at the city’s Address Hotel. A fireworks display was held near the Burj Khalifa skyscraper.

People in Toronto flocked to Nathan Phillips Square
People in Toronto flocked to Nathan Phillips Square

Egypt celebrated with fireworks staged in front of the pyramids near Cairo, as the government works to revive its tourist industry.

Russia – the first major European city to welcome 2016 – held a fireworks display over Red Square in Moscow.

Despite security fears across the continent, many major public events are going ahead, though with heightened security restrictions.

Only 25,000 people in Madrid were allowed into the Puerta del Sol square.

A million people packed into Times Square
A million people packed into Times Square
Celebrations in Berlin went ahead as police warned of a terror attack in Munich
Celebrations in Berlin went ahead as police warned of a terror attack in Munich

Over in Sierra Leone, the declared end of Ebola was marked by a return to New Year festivities, after Freetown, the capital, was left deserted a year ago due to the disease’s outbreak.

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