Milano Cortina Winter Olympics kicks off with unique opening ceremony
Italy’s president declares the Games open, as protests and politics intrude

Italian President Sergio Mattarella officially opened the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics on Friday during a colourful ceremony that celebrated his country’s history, arts and fashion but where political tensions surfaced.
Mattarella, 84, spoke at the main event in Milan’s San Siro stadium as part of an unprecedented show that also linked to celebrations in cohost Cortina d’Ampezzo, more than 400km (250 miles) away in the Dolomites.
US Vice-President J.D. Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio were among the crowd in the iconic soccer stadium and political controversies were evident in some of the crowd reactions.
Vance drew jeers in the stadium when an image of him waving the US flag appeared on a big screen.
The announcement of the Israeli team prompted some booing in Milan over the loud soundtrack, but there were cheers in Cortina d’Ampezzo, the Games cohost that was part of a unique joint opening ceremony. Israel has a team of 10 in Italy.

The group of five athletes from Ukraine in Milan drew huge cheers.