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Istanbul residents opt for New Year's celebrations on water

Due to rising prices and security and sexual harassment concerns, a growing number of middle-class Turks will ring in the new year on the Bosporus.
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Hate the Istanbul traffic, the crowded restaurants and the loud music on New Year's Eve? Party boats on the Bosporus are booking up fast for a celebration away from the crowds.

Street parties and extravagant New Year's events at high-profile and often paparazzi-filled resorts and restaurants have lost their allure in Turkey, particularly after the Reina terrorist attack in 2017 that killed more than 40 people at a nightclub on New Year’s Eve. Turkey’s middle class — not to mention publicity-shy bureaucrats, top managers and media-shunning culturati — largely opted in the past for house parties, making sure that the guest list was as exclusive as the food served. Exhausted by increasing scrutiny from conservative circles and worried about safety, professionally organized parties at home became the most popular choice to ring in the new year.

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