WRAPUP 5 -‘I’ll be alive ‘: 2020 will seep into history as fireworks light up deserted streets

Fireworks went up into the sky above the Sydney Opera House, but the Harbor below was a deserted ghost town, a happy getaway for a year not to be missed. A light show did not illuminate Beijing from the top of the TV tower. St Peter’s in Rome was almost empty for vespers. London’s Trafalgar Square, Moscow’s Red Square, Puerta del Sol in Madrid and New York’s Times Square were all blocked.

Good Riddance, 2020. Halo, 2021. While some cities were launching fireworks over empty streets, others, such as London and Singapore, canceled their shows. Paris, Rome and Istanbul were under siege.

A New York countdown ball was dropped on Broadway. But instead of hundreds of thousands of people clapping shoulder to shoulder in Times Square, the audience would be a few dozen pre-selected key workers – including nurses, doctors, a grocery store staff and a pizza delivery man – were their families held six feet (2 meters) apart in pens at a social distance. Organizers saved Gloria Gaynor to sing her disco classic “I Will Survive”. (Lyrics: “You think I’d cringe? You think I’d lie down and die? Oh no, not me!”)

“It’s going to be, of course, perhaps the most special, the most poignant, New Year’s Eve,” Mayor Bill de Blasio, who pressed the button to start the descent of the crystal ball, told people. statement. “In 2021, we’re going to show people what it’s like to recover, to come back. “With more than 1.7 million people dead and 82 million infected worldwide since New Year’s Eve – but the hope that new vaccines will emerge will help spread the disease – the year has come to an unlikely end. another gin as a souvenir.

Angela Merkel, in her 16th New Year’s Eve speech as German chancellor, said: “I think I’m not doing too much when I say: we’ve never been in the last 15 years. gone so heavy. And we never, in spite of all the worries and a little nostalgia, looked forward to the new one with so much hope. ” Chinese President Xi Jinping said this year’s extraordinary hardship had allowed people to show their resilience: “Only in hard times can confidence and perseverance be demonstrated. It is only after piercing a piece of jade can be nicer. “

‘HELL OF A YEAR’ in the Chinese city of Wuhan, where the whole outbreak occurred a year ago, thousands were expected to gather at landmarks across the city center to count down to 2021. He said some were cautious, but not particularly anxious.

“Safety is the priority,” said Wuhan resident Wang Xuemei, 23, a teacher. In Australia, where Sydney’s annual fireworks show is the world’s first major visual show of the new year, gatherings have been banned and internal borders closed. Most were banned from the city of Sydney.

“What a year it has been,” said Gladys Berejiklian, Sydney’s main state of New South Wales, which includes Sydney. “We hope that 2021 will be easier for all of us.” the virus stopped North Korea from holding its mark in Pyongyang State media showed revelers in a face mask filling the main square for a concert and fireworks.

But in Puerta del Sol in Madrid, where the Spaniards usually count down to midnight by filling their mouth grains at every clock strike, police put up barriers to keep people safe. -mach. Jose Angel Balsa, who is retired at 61, said he would spend the afternoon “with the family, just the four of us at home, holding lots of video calls and hoping this will end. as soon as possible.” In Britain, under ever-tighter restrictions on combating a new, more contagious form of the virus, official billboards are urging the public to “see the New Year safely at home”.

Italian bars and restaurants were closed, and a curfew was set for 10pm. The rules prohibited the traditional gathering of thousands of Catholic worshipers for New Year’s Eve vespers at St. Peter’s Basilica. Pope Francis thwarted plans to conduct the service because of the flame of his sciatica, the Vatican said, and a cardinal read the pope’s sermon to a small congregation at a high school altar.

At “A la Ville de Rodez”, an upmarket delicatessen in Paris, manager Brice Tapon sent customers home with packs of foie gras, truffles and pate for groups of two or three. Rules prohibit more than six adults from gathering around the dinner table. One of the messengers, Anne Chaplin, said she would “fill myself with foie gras, champagne and all this food.”

“And I’ll stay home.”

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