Fireworks as world welcomes 2009
Cities across the globe celebrate the start of 2009
Celebrations are taking place around the world to mark the end of 2008 and usher in the new year.
In Australia, huge crowds turned out to watch multi-million dollar fireworks displays in Sydney and Melbourne.
Cities across Asia and Europe also greeted 2009 with pyrotechnic shows and street gatherings.
Kiritimati, or Christmas Island, in the Pacific Ocean became the first inhabited place on Earth to celebrate the new year at 1000 GMT.
An hour later residents in Auckland, New Zealand, watched a dramatic fireworks display from the city's Sky Tower.
A number of Arab nations - including Egypt, Jordan and Syria - cancelled planned celebrations in solidarity with Palestinians in the Hamas-run Gaza Strip after a fifth day of Israeli air-strikes on the coastal enclave.
Muted festivities
In Sydney, a record crowd of up to 1.5 million people watched fireworks explode over the iconic Harbour Bridge.
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The display, featuring thunder, rain and lightning effects, was the largest ever staged in the city. About 5,000kg of fireworks were used.
Organisers of the Sydney festivities said they were hoping it would offer revellers a brief respite from the economic gloom of 2008.
"There's so much misery around," fireworks director Fortunato Foti told reporters. "If we can get people to forget all that and think just about the fireworks for 15 to 20 minutes, we will have done our job."
In the Philippines, President Gloria Arroyo described 2008 as a "tumultuous" year.
"I hope that we can all work together as a global community to weather these storms," she said in a message.
In Malaysia, the government is not sponsoring any new year events because of the economic downturn.
Celebrations were also muted in the Indian city of Mumbai, following November's deadly attacks.
I'll be sailing up and down the Thames on a boat party with close friends and watching the London fireworks above when the clock strikes 12.
Tight security was planned, with special measures in place along the city's waterfront - where the militants involved in the attacks slipped ashore.
But some Asian cities did opt to mark the end of 2008 in style.
Fireworks shot from the 101-storey Taipei Tower as midnight struck in Taiwan. In Singapore, more than 250,000 people attended a display in Marina Bay.
And in Hong Kong, half a million people watched - some on the shore, some from boats - as fireworks shot into the sky from 10 skyscrapers surrounding Victoria Harbour.
The display was intended to signify "a bright and hopeful New Year for Hong Kong and the world", organisers said.
'Help each other'
At a year's end Vespers prayer in Rome, the splendour of St Peter's Basilica contrasted with Pope Benedict XVI's call for "soberness and solidarity" in 2009.
He urged people not to be afraid during these uncertain times but to help each other.
| Pope Benedict XVI urged people not to be afraid but to help each other |
In London, as tens of thousands gathered for a spectacular fireworks display by the Thames, Mayor Boris Johnson set an upbeat tone in his New Year's address.
"There are those who say we should look ahead to 2009 with foreboding," said Mr Johnson.
"I want to quote Col Kilgore in Apocalypse Now when he says 'Someday captain, this war is going to end'; and someday, this recession is going to end."
"Let's go forward into 2009 with enthusiasm and purpose," he added.
In Greece, Palestinian protesters staged a demonstration near an outdoor concert in Athens during New Year celebrations, chanting slogans and burning Israeli, US and EU flags.
As France prepared to hand over the EU's rotating six-month presidency, French President Nicolas Sarkozy called for Europe to remain strong in 2009.
He said the bloc had proved its strength through its reaction to such challenges as the financial crisis, conflict in Georgia and an ambitious greenhouse gas agreement.
"I remain convinced that the world needs a strong, independent, imaginative Europe," he said.
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