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World greets 2025 after sweltering year of Olympics, turmoil and Trump

  (AFP)
Paris/Jakarta
Wed, January 1, 2025 Published on Jan. 1, 2025 Published on 2025-01-01T08:51:39+07:00

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Fireworks light up above Prambanan Temple, a 9th-century Hindu temple complex and UNESCO World Heritage Site, in Yogyakarta on Jan. 1, 2024. Fireworks light up above Prambanan Temple, a 9th-century Hindu temple complex and UNESCO World Heritage Site, in Yogyakarta on Jan. 1, 2024. (AFP/Devi Rahman)

T

he world ushered in 2025 on Tuesday, with huge crowds waving goodbye to the old year that brought Olympic glory, a dramatic Donald Trump return and turmoil in the Middle East and Ukraine.

It is all but certain that 2024 will go down as the hottest year on record, with climate-fueled disasters wreaking havoc from the plains of Europe to the Kathmandu Valley.

"It's been a rather complicated year, but at the same time you always have to look at the positive side of things. So it's nice to end the year here," said Florence Coret in Paris, where a police source said that more than one million visitors were expected for the night's festivities.

Pro-European Georgians meanwhile rang in the New Year by setting off fireworks at ongoing month-long rallies against a ruling party they accuse of being under Russia's influence.

"Tonight once again proves that the Georgian people will not allow a pro-Russian government to turn our country into a Russian-style despotism," said 42-year-old demonstrator Ilia Darsavelidze.

Before that a spectacular pyrotechnics display lit up Hong Kong's Victoria Harbor as Asia joined in popping champagne corks and launching New Year's Eve parties.

Thousands thronged the streets of Taipei to watch Taiwan's tallest skyscraper erupt in a dazzling display of fireworks.

World heritage sites like Prambanan Temple in Indonesia and the Great Pyramids in Egypt also played host to similar festivities.

And Sydney – the self-proclaimed "New Year's capital of the world" – sprayed nine tonnes of fireworks from its famed Opera House and Harbor Bridge to begin the year's farewell.

In 2024, Taylor Swift brought the curtain down on her Eras tour, pygmy hippo Moo Deng went viral and teenage football prodigy Lamine Yamal helped Spain conquer the Euros.

The Paris Olympics united the world for a brief few weeks in July and August.

Athletes swam in the Seine, raced in the shadows of the Eiffel Tower and rode horses across the manicured lawns outside the Palace of Versailles.

Election upheaval

It was a global year of elections, with countless millions going to the polls across more than 60 countries.

Vladimir Putin prevailed in a Russian ballot widely dismissed as a sham, while a student uprising toppled Bangladesh's reigning prime minister and Indonesians elected a former army general in Southeast Asia's largest democracy.

However, no vote was as closely watched as the Nov. 5 contest that will soon see Trump back in the White House.

From Mexico to the Middle East, his looming return as commander-in-chief is already making waves.

The president-elect has threatened to pile economic pain on China and boasted of his ability to halt the Ukraine war within "24 hours".

A change of government is likewise afoot in Ghana, where president-elect John Mahama will be sworn in on Jan. 7, leading many there to feel a sense of expectation for 2025.

"The peaceful transition after the election gave me hope that maybe things will improve for people like me," Kwesi Antwi, 26, an unemployed graduate, told AFP in the capital Accra.

Fireworks explode in the sky around the London Eye and The Elizabeth Tower, commonly known by the name of the clock's bell, “Big Ben“, at the Palace of Westminster, home to the Houses of Parliament, in central London, just after midnight on Jan. 1, 2025. (AFP/Adrian Dennis)

Hope and trepidation

Turmoil rippled across the Middle East as Bashar al-Assad fled Syria, Israel marched into southern Lebanon and doctored electronics exploded in a wave of Israeli assassinations targeting Hezbollah.

Civilians grew weary of the grinding war in Gaza, where dwindling stocks of food, shelter and medicine made a humanitarian crisis even bleaker.

"May security and safety return, and may the war finally come to an end," Wafaa Hajjaj told AFP from Deir el-Balah, where masses of displaced residents now cram into crowded tents.

There was hope and trepidation as the new year arrived in Syria, which is still reeling after Islamist-led rebels toppled longtime ruler Assad.

"We were hesitant to go out this year because of the security situation, but we decided to overcome our fears," lawyer Maram Ayoub, 34, told AFP from the capital Damascus.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine inches towards its three-year anniversary in February.

Outgunned on its eastern flank, Ukraine must now contend with a Trump administration seemingly intent on winding back crucial military aid.

But President Volodymyr Zelesnky remains defiant, acknowledging in his new year address that "peace will not be given to us as a gift, but we will do everything to stop Russia and end the war".

On the streets of Kyiv, teacher Kateryna Chemeryz wanted "peace finally to be obtained for Ukraine".

In Sudan, marking its second new year under the shadow of war between the regular army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces, many wished for the same.

"We hope to come back to our houses safe and sound this year, for this war to end and just to be able to see home once more," Fatma Mohamed told AFP in Port Sudan.

Tens of thousands have been killed in the fighting, while more than 12 million have been uprooted and millions more face mass starvation.

Displaced Palestinians keep warm under the rubble of a building near a makeshift camp during a storm in Gaza City on Dec. 31, 2024, amid Israel's continuing genocide in the Gaza Strip. (AFP/Omar Al-Qattaa)

Comebacks, football, festivals

With AI advances on the horizon and rampant inflation tipped to slow, there is plenty to look forward to in 2025.

Britpop bad boys Oasis will make a long-awaited reunion, while K-pop megastars BTS return to the stage after military service in South Korea.

Football aficionados will discover a revamped 32-team Club World Cup hosted by the United States in an already crowded calendar.

And about 400 million pilgrims are expected at the spectacular Kumbh Mela festival on India's sacred riverbanks – billed as the largest gathering of humanity on the planet.

The United Kingdom weather service has already forecast sweltering global temperatures for 2025, suggesting it is likely to rank among the hottest years recorded.

On the stock front, Wall Street and Europe's major indexes rang out the year with solid gains, as investors' eyes turned to the impact Trump's policies will have on the world economy.

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