Australia's Sydney began 2026 with a fireworks display held under an enhanced police presence, weeks after gunmen killed 15 people in the city.
Sydney's annual New Year's Eve celebrations are known globally for their spectacular fireworks, with 40,000 pyrotechnic effects stretching seven km across buildings and barges along its harbour, including the city's iconic Harbour Bridge and Opera House.
Organisers held a minute's silence for the victims of the attack at 11:00 p.m. local time (1200 GMT).
"After a tragic end to the year for our city, we hope that New Year’s Eve will provide an opportunity to come together and look with hope for a peaceful and happy 2026," Sydney's Lord Mayor Clover Moore said ahead of the event.
The father and son gunmen are alleged to have killed 15 people on December 14, Australia's worst mass shooting in almost three decades that shocked the nation and stoked fears of rising antisemitism in the country.
Traditional Christmas celebrations at Bondi were muted this year, and several New Year events planned there were cancelled.
Around 3,000 police, some carrying long arms, were deployed in the city during the main New Year celebrations, that typically attract over a million revellers.
"We have to show defiance in the face of this terrible crime and say that we're not going to be cowed by this kind of terrorism, and we're not going to change the way we live our life in our beautiful city," New South Wales Premier Chris Minns said on Wednesday.

Thailand frees 18 Cambodian soldiers as ceasefire holds
Mali and Burkina Faso announce reciprocal travel ban on US
Four injured in Russian attack on Odesa, Ukraine says
Channel tunnel rail passengers face second day of disruption after power failure
Head-on train crash near Peru's Machu Picchu kills driver, injures dozens