The world has begun celebrating the New Year, with revellers in Australia and New Zealand among the first to usher in 2016.

Crowds counted down the last seconds of 2015 at Auckland’s Sky Tower in New Zealand at 1100 GMT, with a laser show and fireworks display.

Up to 25,000 people had been expected to turn up for the festivities.

In Australia, fireworks lit up Sydney harbour at midnight (13:00 GMT). A million were expected to turn up.

New Zealand welcomed in 2016 an hour after Samoa and Kiribati, the first countries to ring in the New Year.

Fireworks explode over the Sydney Opera House and Harbour Bridge as Australia

As the New Year sweeps across Asia, major cities like Hong Kong, Singapore and Beijing will kick off their own celebrations.

In Egypt, festivities will be staged in front of the pyramids near Cairo, as the government works to revive its tourist industry.

Meanwhile, in Dubai, an extravagant display will illuminate the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building, with 400,000 LED lights and 1.6 tons of fireworks set to be used.

Firework display from the top of the Sky Tower to welcome the New Year on January 1, 2015 in Auckland, New Zealand.

When 2016 hits Europe, approximately one million people will countdown at the Brandenburg Gate in Germany’s capital, Berlin.

Despite security fears across the continent, many major public events are going ahead, though with heightened security restrictions.

Indian artist Harwinder Singh Gill displays his new vegetable artwork made with vegetables on New YearBalinese take part in a cultural parade during a New YearPedestrians are seen walking past barricades in Times Square the day before New Year

In Madrid, only 25,000 people will be allowed into the Puerta del Sol Square. More than 100,000 people are expected to watch the Mayor of London’s fireworks show, a ticketed event.

Over in Sierra Leone, the declared end of Ebola will mark a return to festivities, after Freetown, the capital, was left deserted a year ago due to the disease’s outbreak.

As 2016 finally reaches the Americas, up to a million people are expected to converge on Times Square in New York, amid tight security, to watch the famous ball descend.

On Rio de Janeiro’s Copacabana Beach, crowds will not only mark the New Year – they will also fete the 100th anniversary of Samba music, and the upcoming summer Olympics. – BBC