GALLERY: China celebrates Lunar New Year ahead of Olympics
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
Giant panda cubs born in 2021 were brought out on Monday for an event to mark the upcoming Lunar New Year.
PHOTO: Wang Xi/Xinhua via AP
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
An Olympic worker picks up a sign with a Chinese character for fortune written on it.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
An Olympic worker holds a paper with a Chinese character for fortune written on it as he poses with Bing Dwen Dwen, the Beijing Winter Olympics mascot.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
The National Stadium and the Beijing Olympic Tower are lit in red.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A worker carries characters reading "Happiness" for an installation for the upcoming Chinese Lunar New Year.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Andy Wong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A child plays jump rope near lantern decorations.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Andy Wong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A man wearing a face mask printed with a cartoon tiger walks on a street in Beijing.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Andy Wong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
Residents wearing masks pass by Chinese New Year decorations along an alley way in Beijing.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Ng Han Guan
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A woman, left, and her husband, right, from the Shandong province, prepare reunion dishes with their friend at a house as they decided not to go back to their hometown due to recent pandemic travel restrictions.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Andy Wong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A visitor to a retail street poses with cat figures dressed with New Year hats.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Ng Han Guan
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
Signs celebrating the Chinese New Year are seen behind insulated door curtains at the Big Air Shougang.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
Giant panda cubs born in 2021 were brought out on Monday for an event to mark the upcoming Lunar New Year.
PHOTO: Wang Xi/Xinhua via AP
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
An Olympic worker picks up a sign with a Chinese character for fortune written on it.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
An Olympic worker holds a paper with a Chinese character for fortune written on it as he poses with Bing Dwen Dwen, the Beijing Winter Olympics mascot.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
The National Stadium and the Beijing Olympic Tower are lit in red.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A worker carries characters reading "Happiness" for an installation for the upcoming Chinese Lunar New Year.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Andy Wong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A child plays jump rope near lantern decorations.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Andy Wong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A man wearing a face mask printed with a cartoon tiger walks on a street in Beijing.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Andy Wong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
Residents wearing masks pass by Chinese New Year decorations along an alley way in Beijing.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Ng Han Guan
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A woman, left, and her husband, right, from the Shandong province, prepare reunion dishes with their friend at a house as they decided not to go back to their hometown due to recent pandemic travel restrictions.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Andy Wong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A visitor to a retail street poses with cat figures dressed with New Year hats.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Ng Han Guan
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
Signs celebrating the Chinese New Year are seen behind insulated door curtains at the Big Air Shougang.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
Giant panda cubs born in 2021 were brought out on Monday for an event to mark the upcoming Lunar New Year.
PHOTO: Wang Xi/Xinhua via AP
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
An Olympic worker picks up a sign with a Chinese character for fortune written on it.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
An Olympic worker holds a paper with a Chinese character for fortune written on it as he poses with Bing Dwen Dwen, the Beijing Winter Olympics mascot.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
The National Stadium and the Beijing Olympic Tower are lit in red.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A worker carries characters reading "Happiness" for an installation for the upcoming Chinese Lunar New Year.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Andy Wong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A child plays jump rope near lantern decorations.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Andy Wong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A man wearing a face mask printed with a cartoon tiger walks on a street in Beijing.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Andy Wong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
Residents wearing masks pass by Chinese New Year decorations along an alley way in Beijing.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Ng Han Guan
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A woman, left, and her husband, right, from the Shandong province, prepare reunion dishes with their friend at a house as they decided not to go back to their hometown due to recent pandemic travel restrictions.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Andy Wong
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
A visitor to a retail street poses with cat figures dressed with New Year hats.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Ng Han Guan
Beijing Olympics Lunar New Year Photo Gallery
Signs celebrating the Chinese New Year are seen behind insulated door curtains at the Big Air Shougang.
PHOTO: AP Photo/Jae C. Hong
The Lunar New Year in China and the Winter Olympics in Beijing get started only days apart this year.
Bing Dwen Dwen, the chubby panda with the cute smile that is serving as the Olympic mascot, celebrated the Year of the Tiger with locals in Beijing on Monday night — four days before the opening ceremony of the 2022 Games.
Revelers around the host city celebrated and took photos outside displays for the Beijing Games at Tiananmen Square.
The Lunar New Year is the most important annual holiday in China. Each year it is named after one of the 12 signs of the Chinese zodiac, with this year being the Year of the Tiger.
This year’s holiday has seen fewer people return to their hometowns for traditional family gatherings because of the coronavirus pandemic. China’s strict pandemic policies can lead to the swift lockdown of towns and cities, as well as suspension of travel wherever clusters of coronavirus cases are identified.
At the Olympics, athletes and workers are being kept in bubbles to stop the spread of the virus. They are staying in walled-off hotels and can come and go only in special vehicles that take them to the venues and other Olympics facilities.
As of the end of Monday, 272 people had tested positive among more than 10,000 arrivals for the Olympics, organizers said.