Advertisement
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollections2001 (Year)

Spirit of Optimism Holds Sway as World Hails New Millennium

January 01, 2001|From Times Wire Services

LONDON — Much of the world welcomed 2001 today with fireworks, good cheer and optimism, and even in troubled lands the hope of a better future prevailed.

Yugoslavia's celebrations, the first since the ouster of former President Slobodan Milosevic, were dubbed "the first free New Year."


Advertisement

Heavy rains in the last few days brought some relief from power cuts in Yugoslavia by boosting water levels behind power dams. However, flooding drove 2,000 people out of their homes in the smaller Yugoslav republic, Montenegro.

"We have done the best a nation and a state can do in the year behind us," new President Vojislav Kostunica said in a New Year's Eve address on state television in the main republic, Serbia. "We have won freedom without reaching out for violence."

As the turning globe carried country after country into a new millennium and a new century, Australia, still glowing from hosting a successful Olympic Games, set off a show of spectacular fireworks on Sydney Harbor Bridge.

The Philippines celebrated with a cacophony of gunfire and firecrackers--ironically in a country still reeling from a series of explosions in Manila less than 24 hours before that killed 14 people and injured 100.

Shortly afterward, China staged a computerized laser show and a mass wedding at the Great Wall.

Russians marked the holiday with gift-giving and by decorating homes with images of the Santa Claus-like Ded Moroz (Grandfather Frost) and his sidekick Snegurochka (Snow Maiden). Christmas, an official holiday since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, is celebrated on Jan. 7 on the Orthodox calendar.

Bundled up in a red cloak on an unusually cold Roman night, Pope John Paul II made a midnight New Year's Eve appearance to a cheering crowd in Vatican City and wished the world peace and prosperity.

Cold, rainy weather canceled fireworks celebrations in Liverpool, England, and Londonderry in Northern Ireland.

In the Dutch town of Volendam, near Amsterdam, at least four people died and about 130 were injured Sunday as fire swept through a cafe packed with celebrating teenagers.

"In panic, several people jumped out of windows" on the third story to escape the flames, Volendam police spokesman Wietse Peter said.

In Paris, 1,000 drummers from all over Europe were recruited to beat the countdown to midnight in unison at the Georges Pompidou Center.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|