SYDNEY: Crowds will marvel at fireworks and other such displays to greet 2025 on Tuesday, waving goodbye to a year that brought Donald Trump’s return, turmoil in the Middle East, Ukraine and the Olympics.
Hottest year on record
It is all but certain 2024 will go down as the hottest year on record, climate-fuelled disasters wreaking havoc from the plains of Europe to the Kathmandu Valley.
As New Year’s Eve parties kicked into gear along Australia’s picturesque Sydney Harbour on Tuesday afternoon, many revellers were relieved to see the past 12 months in the rearview mirror.
Sydney’s waterfront
“Obviously there’s a lot of war and disruption going on in various places,” insurance worker Stuart Edwards, 32, told AFP as early crowds swelled on Sydney’s waterfront.
“It would be nice for the world if it all sort of fixed itself, sorted itself out.”
The self-proclaimed “New Year’s capital of the world” will spray nine tonnes of fireworks from its famed Opera House and Harbour Bridge at midnight.
More than a million spectators are expected to pack the city’s foreshore to catch a glimpse of the pyrotechnics.
Election upheaval
“Just to see all the beautiful colours and enjoy being in this situation with so many people in wonderful Australia,” said 71-year-old retired nurse Ruth Rowse.
Taylor Swift brought the curtain down on her Eras tour this year, pygmy hippo Moo Deng went viral, and 16-year-old football prodigy Lamine Yamal helped Spain conquer the Euros.
A student uprising toppled Sheikh Hasina’s Regime
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, while a student uprising in Bangladesh toppled the reigning prime minister Sheikh Hasina Wajid.
However, no vote was as closely watched as the November 5 contest that will soon see Donald Trump back in the White House.
The president-elect has threatened to pile economic pain on China and boasted of his ability to halt the Ukraine war within “24 hours”.
Bashar al-Assad fled Syria
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 assassinations targeting Hezbollah.
War in Gaza
Civilians grew weary of the grinding war in Gaza, where dwindling stocks of food, shelter and medicine made a humanitarian crisis even bleaker.
“The year 2024 was the most difficult year,” Wafaa Hajjaj told AFP from Deir el-Balah, where masses of displaced residents now cram into crowded tents.
“I lost many loved ones, including my father and close friends, starting from the beginning of the year,” she said. “May security and safety return, and may the war finally come to an end.”
War in Ukraine
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine inches towards its grim 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.
On the streets of Kyiv, teacher Kateryna Chemeryz wanted “peace to finally be obtained for Ukraine” and for “people to stop dying”.
Comebacks, football, festivals
With AI advances on the horizon and rampant inflation tipped to slow, there is still plenty to look forward to in 2025.
K-pop megastars BTS return to the stage after military service in South Korea.
Football aficionados will be treated to a revamped 32-team Club World Cup hosted in the United States.
But with electric vehicle sales growing and renewable energy on the rise, there is a shred of hope that glacial progress on climate change may finally gain momentum.