North Korea stepped out of its isolation as a last-minute participant, and there are signs that Turkey may use the occasion to reach out to the Vatican weeks after it recalled its ambassador to the Holy See over the pope describing the slaughter of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as genocide.
Not all of the diplomatic signals around Expo have been positive. India, in a drawn-out dispute with Italy over its determination to put two Italian sailors on trial for the shooting deaths at sea of two fishermen, skipped the global event due to the tensions, Expo organizers said.
But the Milan Expo already had greater ambitions, with the Italian government backing a process to create a document of solutions to fight hunger and food waste, among other goals.
A violent protest today, however, left torched cars, smashed bank and shop windows and other damage in the streets of downtown Milan, far from Expo's sprawling grounds on the financial capital's outskirts. Protesters split off from a generally non-violent march a few hours after Italian Premier Matteo Renzi inaugurated the fair.
Firefighters worked to extinguish the blazes. Some marchers' placards protested a high-speed rail line being built in northern Italy as well as Expo 2015 and other "big projects."
In a peaceful protest yesterday by students, participants opposed the inclusion of food corporations like Coca Cola, Nestle and McDonald's in the fair. Protester Selam Tesfai said those companies don't adhere to the Expo's slogans of "feeding the planet" and "energy for life."
Pope Francis hailed Expo's hunger-fighting goals in a speech today delivered by video from Vatican City to a VIP audience at the Expo's inauguration, speaking of the "millions of people who are hungry today, who don't eat today in a way worthy of a human being."
"I'd want every person, starting today, who visits the Expo in Milan, passing through these marvelous pavilions, to be able to feel the presence of those faces," Francis said.
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