This is how the world opens up to 2022

This is how the world opens up to 2022

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3… 2… 1! As the globe prepared for 2022, many nations already ushered in the new year.

Mexico City, December 31 (AP) .– With spectacular fireworks and subdued festivities, and in some instances, with face coverings for COVID-19 prevention, the world transitioned from 2021 to 2022. Amidst the Omicron variant‘s surge, many held onto hope for brighter days ahead.



Fireworks explode over the Chao Phraya River during New Years celebrations in Bangkok, Thailand.  Photo: Wason Wanichakorn, AP.In Dubai, UAE, many residents gathered near the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest structure, to enjoy a spectacular fireworks and laser display to welcome the new year.



A Palestinian woman takes photos of her children near the beach on the last day of the year in Gaza City on Friday, December 31, 2021. Photo: Adel Hana, AP.

People ignite sparklers as they welcome the new year in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, December 31, 2021. Photo: Amr Nabil, AP.

Many celebrate New Year's Eve in Belgrade, Serbia, on December 31, 2021. Photo: Darko Vojinovic, AP.In Belgrade, Serbia, enormous crowds assembled for open-air musical performances, firework displays, and dazzling light shows. Unlike other parts of Europe, large gatherings were permitted in the city.



A pair shared a kiss to mark the start of the new year at Shibuya's well-known intersection, a favorite spot for New Year's festivities in Tokyo, on Saturday, January 1, 2022, despite the official countdown being canceled.  Photo: Kiichiro Sato, AP.

Sydney's New Year's Eve fireworks display over the Opera House, December 31, 2021.  Photo credit: Dean Lewins, AAP Image via AP.


Provided by However
Fireworks over the Sydney Opera House during the New Year’s celebrations, December 31, 2021. Photographer: Dean Lewins, AAP Image via AP.

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Naoki Matsuzawa, a Yokohama-based author, expressed holiday wishes for everyone, detailing his plan to volunteer, preparing and distributing New Year’s meals to senior citizens in the coming days.



People celebrated the start of 2022 in Hong Kong.  Photo: Vincent Yu, AP.

A Ukrainian serviceman rests near a frontline position bordering pro-Russian separatists in Ukraine's Donetsk area on December 31, 2021.  Image credit: Andriy Dubchak, Associated Press.


Image supplied
A Ukrainian soldier pauses near his fighting position on the boundary with pro-Russian separatists in the Donetsk region of Ukraine, December 31, 2021. Andriy Dubchak/ Associated Press.

This text appears to be fragments of HTML code describing images within a news article. It shows snippets of two images related to New Year’s Eve celebrations in Cairo, Egypt, and Belgrade, Serbia. The code includes:

Image tags (): These define the images, specifying the src (source URL), alt text (alternative text for screen readers), and other attributes. The URLs are shortened and appear to point to images hosted on MSN.com.

Container spans (): These elements structure the images within the webpage, providing classes (storyimage, image) for styling and functionality, and including data attributes (data-attrib, data-caption, data-id) with metadata like image source and caption.

The code is incomplete. The src attributes for the images are cut off, making them unusable. Also, there’s a portion of text describing the Belgrade celebration seemingly outside any image tag.

To correctly render these, the complete and un-truncated src attributes are necessary. The HTML needs to be properly closed as well. The final image mentioned (Tokyo) is only introduced – the corresponding tag is missing.

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