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New Zealand’s Auckland is first major city to ring in 2024

Happy new year!

Joe Connor by Joe Connor
2023-12-31 12:52
in News
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Auckland has become the first major city to ring in 2024, with a crowd of thousands cheering a fireworks display sprouting from New Zealand’s tallest structure, Sky Tower, and a light show.

Happy New Year from my balcony in Auckland, the first major world city to welcome 2024! Here’s to a year that overflows with gorgeousness, love and good health. ❤️❤️🎇🎇🎆🎆🍾🍾🥂🥂🎉🎉🥳🥳 #newyear #newyear2024 #auckland #newzealand #fireworks #skytower #skytowerauckland pic.twitter.com/YaMSWT3Mpc

— Seamus Kearney (@seamuskearney_) December 31, 2023

This year’s New Year’s Eve celebrations are being overshadowed by the ongoing wars in Ukraine and Gaza, which have cast a pall over festivities and heightened tensions across parts of the world.

Many cities are deploying extra security and some places have cancelled New Year’s Eve events altogether.

In Auckland, light rain throughout Sunday had cleared as forecast by midnight over the city of 1.7 million people before the countdown began on an illuminated digital display near the top of the 1,076ft (328m) communications and observation tower.

🇳🇿 FLASH – Nouvelle année célébrée à Auckland, Nouvelle-Zélande. (@Andrew_S_Dykes)#BonneAnnée #Auckland #NouvelleZelande pic.twitter.com/RAhqwTgpra

— Media Express (@Media_Express1) December 31, 2023
New Zealand New Year’s Eve
Fireworks burst from the Sky Tower in Auckland, New Zealand, to celebrate the New Year (Hayden Woodward/New Zealand Herald/AP)

Two hours later in neighbouring Australia, the Sydney Harbour Bridge would become the focal point of a renowned midnight fireworks display and light show viewed annually by around 425 million people worldwide, according to city authorities.

More police than ever have been deployed throughout Sydney to ensure safety as more than a million people – equivalent to one in five of the city’s population – converge on the harbour waterfront for the best available views, state government authorities said in a statement.

Many revellers have been camping at the best vantage points since Sunday morning.

The waterfront has been the scene of heated pro-Palestinian protests after the sails of the Sydney Opera House were illuminated in the colours of the Israeli flag in response to the October 7 attack by Palestinian militant group Hamas that triggered the war.

In New York’s Times Square, officials and party organisers said they are prepared to welcome crowds of revellers and ensure their safety.

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At a security briefing on Friday, New York City Mayor Eric Adams said there are “no specific threats” to the annual New Year’s Eve bash, which is expected to draw tens of thousands of people to the heart of midtown Manhattan.

The celebrity-filled event will include live performances from Flo Rida, Megan Thee Stallion and LL Cool J, as well as televised appearances from Cardi B and others.

Australia New Year’s Eve
Fireworks explode over Sydney Harbour as Australia’s New Year’s Eve celebrations get under way (Dan Himbrechts/AAP/AP)

Organisers said in-person attendance is expected to return to pre-Covid levels, even as foot traffic around Times Square remains down slightly since the pandemic.

Amid near-daily protests in New York sparked by the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip, police said they would expand the security perimeter around the party, creating a “buffer zone” which will allow them to head off potential demonstrations.

“We will be out here with our canines, on horseback, our helicopters, our boats,” Mr Adams said.

Officials will also monitor protests with drones, he added. “But as we saw last year, after having no specific threats, we get a threat.”

During last year’s New Year’s Eve party, a machete-wielding man attacked three police officers a few blocks from Times Square.

Security will also be heightened across France on Sunday, with 90,000 law enforcement officers set to be deployed, domestic intelligence chief Celine Berthon said on Friday.

Of those, 6,000 will be in Paris, where French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said more than 1.5 million people are expected to attend celebrations on the Champs-Elysees.

Speaking at a news conference, Mr Darmanin cited a “very high terrorist threat” because, in part, of “what is happening in Israel and Palestine”..

The minister said that police for the first time will be able to use drones as part of security work and that tens of thousands of firefighters and 5,000 soldiers will also be deployed.

New Year’s Eve celebrations in the French capital will centre on the 2024 Paris Olympic Games, including DJ sets, fireworks and video projections on the Arc de Triomphe, highlighting “changes in the city and faces of the Games”, according to the press service of the City of Paris.

Other planned events include “the largest Mexican wave ever performed” and a “giant karaoke”.

Local authorities have instituted a ban on the sale of alcohol on and around the Champs Elysees on New Year’s Eve, and the public will not be able to access the area with glass bottles and flasks.

India New Year’s Eve
People hold the figure 2024 and cheer during an event to say goodbye to 2023 and welcome the new year in Ahmedabad, India (Ajit Solanki/AP)

In Russia, the country’s military actions in Ukraine have overshadowed end-of-year celebrations, with the usual fireworks and concert on Moscow’s Red Square cancelled, as last year.

After shelling in the centre of the Russian border city of Belgorod on Saturday killed 24 people, some local authorities across Russia also cancelled their usual firework displays, including in Vladivostok.

Millions throughout Russia are expected to tune into Russian President Vladimir Putin’s New Year’s address.

In Muslim-majority Pakistan, the government has banned all New Year’s Eve celebrations as an act of solidarity with the Palestinians.

In an overnight televised message, caretaker Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar urged Pakistanis to “show solidarity with the oppressed people of Gaza” by beginning the new year with simplicity.

He said Muslims across the world are saddened over Israel’s attacks on Gaza which have resulted in the killings of thousands of innocent people.

Related: In Pictures: Barbie bog snorkels and flaming vikings – the quirkiness of 2023

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