Thousands of Singaporeans gathered to celebrate and ring in the New Year in style.
At the Pinnacle@Duxton, it was a New Year in a new home. The skybridge was packed with new residents eager to take in the view from above. And they were rewarded for their patience, with unparalleled view guaranteed to start 2010 with a bang.
Crowds in Sembawang too had their fill of fireworks, but not before a medley of performances by dance groups and regional acts, with a touch of magic sprinkled in.
Things heated up at the Marina Barrage as well. Revellers danced the night away in a massive 12-hour party, where fiery beats helped chase away the troubles of 2009.
Sentosa was also packed with partygoers. 20,000 people gathered on Siloso Beach at five different parties, with plenty of foam to help them slide smoothly into the New Year and fireworks lighting up the shoreline at the stroke of midnight.
And it was a song-and-dance-extravaganza at Marina Bay. Singapore Idol finalists performed to a packed crowd at the floating platform, while fringe events at the Esplanade helped set the tone for a brand new year and decade.
Shareholders of Marvel Entertainment Inc., home to the X-Men, Iron Man, Spider-Man and other characters, approved the company’s acquisition by The Walt Disney Co. on Thursday.
Marvel, in a statement, said shareholders approved the US$4.3-billion deal announced in August under which the comic book giant and its stable of action heroes will become a wholly-owned subsidiary of Disney.
The acquisition is Disney’s biggest since its purchase of animation house Pixar three years ago.
Besides Spider-Man, Iron Man and the X-Men, Marvel’s cast of over 5,000 characters includes Captain America, the Fantastic Four and Thor.
Marvel is celebrating its 70th anniversary this year. It was founded in 1939 as comic book publisher Timely Comics.
Besides comics, Marvel characters also feature in movies, animated features, videogames and toys such as action figures.
China arrested more than 5,000 people in a crackdown on Internet pornography in 2009, officials said, vowing tougher online policing in the new year as a key element of “state security”.
China maintains strict censorship of the Internet to curb what the government deems to be unhealthy content including porn and violence – an effort that has become known as the “Great Firewall of China”.
Authorities in December offered rewards of up to 10,000 yuan (US$1,465) to Internet users who report websites that feature pornography.
According to figures published by the ministry of public security late Thursday, 5,394 people were arrested last year under the Internet porn crackdown, and 9,000 illegal porn-related sites were shut down.
The ministry, in a statement on its website, did not specify if all of those arrested were later prosecuted.
It said it would “strengthen punishment for Internet operators that violate the laws and regulations” in the coming year.
“Purifying the Internet environment and cracking down on Internet crimes is related to long-term state security,” the ministry said.
Internet use has expanded at a dizzying pace in China, which now has the world’s largest online population with at least 338 million users.
The government is concerned that left unchecked, the Internet could become a means for ordinary citizens to spread information harmful to society – including ideas that are critical of the communist authorities.
China has blocked several social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter. Citizens can only gain access to such sites by using proxy servers.
Earlier this year Beijing threatened to sanction major websites, including search engine giants Google and Baidu, alleging that pornography and other material that could corrupt young people was turning up in search results.
Authorities effectively cut off Internet access in the far-western Xinjiang region after deadly ethnic unrest erupted there in July.
The government says terrorists, separatists and religious extremists used the Internet, telephones and mobile text messages to spread rumours and hatred as the violence broke out.
Earlier this week, limited access to state-run news websites was restored.