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Reply to "See how countries around the world are celebrating 2018"

Japan

Visitors watch the fireworks display during a New Year's Eve event an aquarium-amusement park complex in Yokohama, southwest of Tokyo.
Visitors watch the fireworks display during a New Year's Eve event an aquarium-amusement park complex in Yokohama, southwest of Tokyo.  (Shizuo Kambayashi/The Associated Press)  

Many Japanese celebrated the arrival of the Year of the Dog in the traditional way of praying for peace and good fortune at neighbourhood Shinto shrines, and eating New Year’s food such as noodles, shrimp and sweet black beans.

Barbecued beef and octopus dumpling stalls were out at Tokyo’s Zojoji Temple, where people take turns striking the giant bell 108 times at midnight, an annual practice repeated at other Buddhist temples throughout Japan.

North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs cast a shadow over Japan’s hopes for peace, said 33-year-old cab driver Masaru Eguchi, who was ready to be busy all night shuttling shrine visitors.

“The world situation has grown so complex,” Eguchi said, adding that he also worried about possible terrorism targeting Japan. “I feel this very abstracted sense of uncertainty, although I really have no idea what might happen.”

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