Farewell to 2023, all over the world

(Paris) Crowds of revelers have begun to bid farewell to the turbulent year 2023, the hottest on record, marked by the rise of artificial intelligence, the climate crisis and the bloody wars in Gaza and Ukraine.


The world’s population – now over eight billion – begins the new year with hopes of ending the high cost of living and global conflict.

In Sydney, the self-proclaimed “New Year’s Eve capital of the world”, more than a million revelers packed the harbor foreshore, with city authorities and police warning that all vantage points were occupied.

People gathered at iconic sites across the city, defying unusually wet weather, and were not disappointed when the Harbor Bridge and other landmarks were lit up and colored by eight tons of fireworks .

Pyrotechnics also lit up the skies of Auckland, Hong Kong, Bangkok and Manila.

PHOTO PETER PARKS, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Fireworks in Hong Kong.

Nudist bathers wearing Santa hats waded in the fresh waters of the Mediterranean in the south of France, while revelers ate meat skewers and danced in the streets during traditional end-of-year celebrations in Thessaloniki, Greece.

In Tel Aviv, Israel, on one of the city’s busiest streets, many young people went out to bars and restaurants to celebrate the new year.

Ran Stahl, 24, decided to work that evening in the wine bar where he has been working for a few weeks; he doesn’t have the heart to “dance” and have fun “because the minute I start dancing, sadness and mourning come back,” says the young man, whose friend died at the Tribe music festival of Nova on October 7.

“People want to celebrate tonight,” the young man said during his service, “but I can’t be as happy as I could be.”

Over the past twelve months, the world has been overcome by the pink wave of “Barbie mania,” experienced an unprecedented proliferation of artificial intelligence tools and the world’s first entire eye transplant.

Climate disasters

India has become the most populous country in the world, taking the title from China. It was also the first country to land a spacecraft in the unexplored South Pole region of the Moon.

The year 2023 was also the hottest year since records began in 1880, with a series of climate disasters hitting the planet, from Pakistan to the Horn of Africa to the Amazon basin.

PHOTO FRANCIS MASCARENHAS, REUTERS

New Year party in Mumbai, India.

But above all, 2023 will be marked by the unprecedented attack by Hamas on Israeli soil on October 7 – and by Israel’s relentless reprisals.

The United Nations estimates that nearly two million Gaza residents have been displaced since the start of the siege imposed by Israel, or around 85% of the population.

In Gaza City, reduced to ruins, there are few places left to celebrate the New Year.

PHOTO AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

The sun sets for one last time in 2023 on the Egyptian Gaza border.

“It was a dark year full of tragedy,” said Abed Akkawi, who fled the city with his wife and three children.

This 37-year-old man, who now lives in a United Nations camp in Rafah, in the south of the Gaza Strip, says he lost his brother, but he clings to meager hopes for 2024.

The end of the war

“God willing, this war will end, the new year will be better and we will be able to return to our homes and rebuild them, or just live in a tent on the rubble,” he told AFP.

In Ukraine, where the Russian invasion is approaching its second anniversary, defiance and hope dominate despite a new Russian attack.

PHOTO VALENTYN OGIRENKO, REUTERS

People gather in front of Saint Sophia Cathedral in Kyiv.

” Victory ! We are waiting for it and believe that Ukraine will win,” said Tetiana Shostka, 42, as sirens announcing an air raid sounded in Kyiv. “We will have everything we want if Ukraine is free, without Russia.”

Some in Vladimir Putin’s Russia are tired of the conflict. “In the New Year, I would like the war to end, there to be a new president and a return to normal life,” says Zoya Karpova, a 55-year-old theater designer and resident of Moscow.

But Vladimir Putin himself remained defiant during his New Year’s Eve speech, vowing that Russia “will never back down” and praising front-line troops.

He is already Russia’s longest-serving leader since Joseph Stalin and will be in contention again in March’s elections, although few expect them to be completely free and fair.

In Rome, Pope Francis prayed for the victims of conflicts around the world, citing the Ukrainians, Palestinians and Israelis, the people of Sudan and the “Rohingya martyrs” in Burma.

“At the end of the year, have the courage to ask yourself how many lives have been torn apart in armed conflicts, how many deaths,” declared the sovereign pontiff, aged 87, after the Angelus prayer on St. Peter’s Square.

Important elections

Mr. Putin is the longest-serving Russian leader since Joseph Stalin and his name will again appear on the ballot in March’s elections.

Few believe in the vote being completely free and fair, or expect him to lose.

In addition to the Russian elections, more than four billion people in total will be called to the polls, notably in the United Kingdom, the European Union, India, Indonesia, Mexico, South Africa, Venezuela and of course the States -United, where Democrat Joe Biden, 81, and Republican Donald Trump, 77, intend to face each other again next November.

Outgoing president, Mr. Biden has at times shown signs of advanced age and even some of his supporters worry about the consequences of another term.

As for Donald Trump, facing several indictments and at least three of whose trials are supposed to begin in 2024 before the presidential election, nothing immediately prevents him from campaigning.


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