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Tens of thousands turn out to celebrate Chinese New Year

More than 500,000 people were expected to welcome the Year of the Dragon in London, organisers said.

Helen William
Sunday 11 February 2024 09:54 EST
Performers take part in celebrations involving costumes, lion dances and floats in Londonā€™s Trafalgar Square (Lucy North/PA)
Performers take part in celebrations involving costumes, lion dances and floats in Londonā€™s Trafalgar Square (Lucy North/PA) (PA Wire)

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Tens of thousands of people have turned out to see colourful dancing dragons help celebrate the Chinese New Year across the UK.

In London they were treated to a blaze of red and gold with elaborate costumes, awakening lion dancing, Chinese performers, street food stalls plus Chinese arts and crafts as the cityā€™s Chinatown hosted a day of family-friendly activities.

Peter Yick Kuen Lam, president of the London Chinatown Chinese Association (LCCA) which organised the festival that welcomed the Year of the Dragon, said: ā€œIt is very important for us. Chinese New Year is just like Christmas.

ā€œIt is a very special event for the Chinese community and a chance for us to have a good cultural exchange.

ā€œWe can share our joyfulness with everyone. It is a chance to celebrate.

He added: ā€œToday is a special day for gathering.

ā€œIt is all red because red is a lucky colour, it is all red and gold.

ā€œI hope it will give everyone happiness and the start to a prosperous new year. Peace and happiness is especially important.ā€

More than 500,000 people are expected to enjoy the dayā€™s celebrations, the organisers say.

A traditional parade, complete with dragons, swirling dancers and handcrafted floats, kicked off the dizzying array of events in central London and its Chinatown neighbourhood.

There were leaping acrobats dressed in elaborate dragon costumes, music and a dramatic electric firecracker display.

Some lucky children were seen clutching toy dragons and gold balloons while many visitors were given red packages (in the form of red envelopes) as a symbol of good fortune.

Senior figures from the London and Chinese community, including Mayor Sadiq Khan, joined thousands of wellwishers in Trafalgar Square who watched an opening ceremony which included the ā€œawakeningā€ of colourful costumed lions.

The Year of the Dragon is considered one of the most powerful and auspicious years in the Chinese zodiac, symbolising strength, fortune and success.

The theme for the 2024 celebrations is Roaring into Sustainable Prosperity and Empowering Youth, the LCCA said.

Mr Khan hailed the contribution of Londoners of Chinese origin and warned against those who want to ā€œdivide and discourageā€.

In a speech to the revellers in Trafalgar Square, he said: ā€œThank you for contributing to our city culturally, economically and socially.

He added: ā€œThere are some people who try to divide our communities.

ā€œWe canā€™t let them succeed. We have got to show them that our diversity is a strength.

ā€œThis Year of the Dragon is about good prosperity, good fortune and good luck ā€“ and donā€™t we just need that this year of all years.ā€

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