If anyone doubts the significance of the world expo, don’t tell that to the Chinese. In the wake of the global financial crisis, China has committed to organizing the largest-ever world expo.
Once called the world’s fair, the numbers surrounding next year’s event in Shanghai are staggering. China will spend about 4.2 billion dollars staging the expo, more, in fact than was spent for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Expo organizers expect 70 million people to attend the 6-month-long festival including about 3.5 million visitors from overseas. Compare this to the last world expo, which was held Japan in 2005, and attracted slightly over 22 million visitors.
Organizers of the Shanghai World Expo were sweating over its first weeks, and it wasn't because of the muggy summer weather.
Attendance figures weren't nearly what had been expected. Things have picked up as of late, though. More than half a million visitors crammed onto the expo grounds on June 5th, coming in at just a shade under the all time record for one day expo attendance set in Montreal in 1967.
People in line for some of the more popular pavilions—like Saudi Arabia, the UK, and the U.S.'s—have had to queue up for four or five hours for what's usually no more than a twenty minute trip through each pavilion.
By and large, countries staging expo pavilions have chosen to showcase their softer, cultural sides, and here, Iraq is no exception. Anyone expecting an education on the country's present day troubles had best look elsewhere.
Students Evacuated After Collapse Lavish Wedding Sparks Outrage Foreigners Face Death For Drug Crime World Of Warcraft To Get Approval Shanghai's Green Business Park Expo Visitors Warned To Book Ahead Access To Three Sns Blocked One Down, One To Go