Paris Champs-Elysees Avenue to wear mourning for tsunami victims
31/12/2004 11:36
The famous Champs-Elysees Avenue in Paris, traditional site for the New
Year's celebration, is to wear mourning Friday evening to pay tribute to victims
in Asian tsunamis, announced Thursday the City Hall of Paris. Paris mayor
Bertrand Delanoe "hoped that the Champs-Elysees Avenue and the Concorde Square
will wear in mourning to pay homage to victims of the earthquake that swept
across 11 Southeast Aisan countries," said the City Hall in a statement. Some
black belts of 2.6 meters long and 30 centimeters large will be hung on 400
trees of "the world's most beautiful avenue" and 80 candelabras on the Concorde
Square at one end of the Avenue, the statement said. "This initiative
symbolizes Paris' solidarity with all the peoples stricken by the tragedy," it
added. The Champs-Elysees Avenue receives every year some hundreds of
thousands of Paris citizens and tourists from allover the world to celebrate the
New Year. There were 450,000 people on Dec. 31, 2003 on the Avenue, according to
the City Hall. An 8.9-magnitude underwater earthquake struck off the
Indonesian island of Sumatra on Sunday morning. The quake and its aftershocks
triggered tsunamis which hit India, Sri Lanka, Malaysia and four other Asian
countries. The overall death toll from the disasters has surpassed 125,000.
Xinhua
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