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TIME AND SPACE
Revellers welcome 2015 but celebrations turn deadly in China
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) Jan 01, 2015


Chinese stampedes: a chronology
Beijing (AFP) Jan 01, 2015 - At least 35 people have been killed and dozens injured in a stampede at New Year's celebrations in Shanghai.

Though most large gatherings in China are carefully controlled by authorities, the country has seen other incidents in which overcrowding has caused panic and deaths.

Here is a brief chronology of other recent stampedes in China:

September 26, 2014: Six children were killed and two dozen injured in a stampede at a primary school in Kunming, capital of the southwestern province of Yunnan, after a stairway was blocked.

January 5, 2014: Fourteen people, some of them children, were killed and 10 injured in a stampede that broke out as food was being distributed at a mosque in Ningxia, one of China's poorer regions.

February 27, 2013: Four children died at a school in the central province of Hubei when pupils left their dormitory on the fourth floor and attempted to exit the block. The ground floor gate was closed, resulting in the crush.

November 29, 2010: A stampede in a primary school in the small city of Aksu in China's far western Xinjiang region left nearly 100 children injured, with 41 of them hospitalised.

March 23, 2009: Two people were killed and 11 injured as shoppers stampeded during a sales promotion in Chongqing in southwestern China.

February 1, 2008: A woman was killed after a stampede at a major China railway station where hundreds of thousands of passengers were stranded by bitter snowstorms.

February 5, 2004: A stampede on a pedestrian bridge on the outskirts of Beijing killed 37 people and injured 15 as spectators gathered during a lantern exhibition.

January 1, 1993: Twenty people were killed and more than 70 injured as New Year's Eve revellers poured into a narrow street after midnight in Hong Kong, at the time still under British rule.

Millions of revelers took to the streets from Sydney to New York to usher in 2015 on Thursday, but celebrations turned to tragedy in China, where 35 people were killed in a stampede in central Shanghai.

As many as a million partygoers braved frigid temperatures and poured into New York's Times Square for America's annual New Year party that this year featured pop sensation Taylor Swift.

Merrymakers in the Big Apple were kissing and snapping selfies as a giant illuminated crystal ball slid down a pole, touching ground at precisely the stroke of midnight.

As Times Square erupted in cheers and confetti, the rest of the globe celebrated with spectacular fireworks displays in cities from Sydney to Moscow.

But chaos broke out in China's financial hub as people packed the Bund district to welcome the New Year.

In addition to the dead, 42 people were injured in the crush, which happened shortly before midnight, Shanghai's government said in a statement, adding that the incident was under investigation.

Official news agency Xinhua cited a witness saying coupons that looked like US dollar notes were thrown from a third-floor window and revelers along the river bank started to scramble for them.

Tragedy also struck in the Philippines where, in what has become an annual tide of New Year's injuries, firecrackers and gunfire left more than 350 people injured, with more than a dozen requiring amputations.

- Defiant Sydney crowds -

Those tragic notes were struck on a night filled with hopes for a more peaceful year than 2014.

The optimism was demonstrated in Australia, where an estimated one million people flocked to a massive fireworks display in Sydney Harbour, defying terrorist fears days after a deadly siege.

"We are celebrating that we are a multicultural, harmonious community but we will be thinking about what happened," Sydney's Lord Mayor Clover Moore said in reference to the deadly standoff when an Iranian-born gunman took 17 hostages in a cafe.

In Hong Kong, hundreds of thousands of people crowded the city's promenades to watch an eight-minute pyrotechnic display after a year in which busy thoroughfares were paralysed for months by pro-democracy protests.

"I think a more peaceful year would be good for everybody," said Louis Ho, 65.

Europe's celebrations kicked off in Moscow, where red and green fireworks lit up the sky over St. Basil's Cathedral, bringing "oohs" and "aahs" from the crowd braving sub-zero conditions.

President Vladimir Putin sent a greeting to his US counterpart Barack Obama, saying they had a mutual responsibility to ensure world peace after a year that has seen relations between Russia and the West sink to their worst point since the Cold War.

Obama's office, meanwhile, said he planned to usher in the New Year in Hawaii "with family and friends" as he winds down a two-week vacation and prepares to head back to Washington this weekend.

Dubai celebrated the new year with a light and sound extravaganza at the Burj Khalifa, the world's tallest tower, which was lit up with different-coloured panels as the clock counted down to 2015.

- 19th eurozone nation -

In London, the skyline was illuminated by a thunderous firework display in front of over 100,000 ticket holders gathered on the banks of the River Thames.

Further north, Edinburgh held its traditional Hogmanay street party although celebrations at the nearby Stirling Castle were cancelled due to high winds.

In Paris, the Champs-Elysees was closed off to traffic to allow pedestrians to watch a visual spectacle projected onto the Arc de Triomphe before a huge fireworks display greeted the New Year.

Tens of thousands of people gathered near the Brandenburg Gate in central Berlin to watch fireworks and a free concert featuring "Baywatch" star David Hasselhoff.

"The Hoff" had the crowd singing along to "Looking for Freedom", the song he performed 25 years ago as the Berlin Wall fell.

Roughly 20,000 people packed Madrid's central Puerta del Sol square to ring in 2015, gobbling a grape on each of the 12 chimes of the clock at midnight for 12 months of good luck.

It was a particularly significant night for Lithuania, where leaders withdrew their first euro notes from a Vilnius bank machine after it became the 19th country to adopt the single currency.

- Remembrance for lost AirAsia flight -

Across Asia, revelers celebrated with fireworks and music, with hundreds of thousands crowding near the landmark skyscraper Taipei 101 to watch performances by pop singers.

But in Malaysia, a sombre mood prevailed after the crash of AirAsia Flight QZ8501 carrying 162 people and flooding in the northeast that has displaced almost 250,000.

Year-end celebrations have been cancelled, with many companies instead launching fundraising campaigns for flood victims.

In Indonesia, where most of the victims were from, New Year festivities in the capital started solemnly with a prayer for the victims while relatives gathered in Surabaya for a candlelit vigil in the hours before midnight.

Meanwhile in Afghanistan, the last French troops in the country held a ceremony in Kabul to mark the end of their deployment after NATO combat operations closed down as a new "train and support" mission takes over.

In the Americas, in addition to New York's massive street party, celebrations a fireworks show in Brazil expected to draw more than two million people on Copacabana beach, to open celebrations marking 450 years since the founding of Rio de Janeiro.

burs-sg/hmn


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