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Fiery welcome to Year of the Dragon

TAIPEI (AP) – With fireworks, feasts and red envelopes stuffed with cash for the kids, numerous Asian nations and overseas communities welcomed on Saturday the Lunar New Year.

It begins with the first new moon of the lunar calendar and ends 15 days later on the first full moon. The dates of the holiday vary slightly each year, falling between late January and mid-February as it is based on the cycles of the moon.

In most countries, highways were clogged and flights fully booked as residents travelled home to visit family or took the approximately one-week holiday as an opportunity to vacation abroad.

Firing bottle rockets and other fireworks is a traditional way of welcoming the new year and seeing off any lingering bad memories.

Children are given red envelopes stuffed with cash as a show of affection and to help them get a leg-up in the coming months.

Long lines of cars congested South Korean highways on Saturday as millions of people began leaving the densely populated Seoul capital region to visit relatives across the country for the Lunar New Year’s holiday.

Royal palaces and other tourist sites were also packed with visitors wearing the country’s colourful traditional hanbok flowing robes.

Groups of ageing North Korean refugees from the 1950-53 civil war, which remains unresolved, bowed northward during traditional family rituals held in the Southern border town of Paju.

The holiday came amid heightened tensions with North Korea, which has been ramping up its weapons tests and issuing provocative threats of nuclear conflict with the South. The South’s President Yoon Suk Yeol started the holiday by issuing a message of thanks to South Korean soldiers, saying that their services along the “frontline barbwires, sea and sky” were allowing the nation to enjoy the holidays. Vietnam also celebrated the Lunar New Year, known there as Tet. Parades and commemorations are also being held in cities with large Asian communities overseas, particularly in New York and San Francisco.

ABOVE & BELOW: A woman holds a spring couplet with dragon patterns that she drew herself for the Lunar New Year celebrations at the Dihua street market in Taipei; and people visit a temple on the first day of the Lunar New Year celebrations. PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP
ABOVE & BELOW: Shoppers at the Dihua street market for the Lunar New Year celebrations. PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP
ABOVE & BELOW: A sales woman calls out to shoppers; and worshippers pray at a temple. PHOTO: AP
PHOTO: AP

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