Sweden triumphs in controversial song contest
SWEDEN: Swedish star Loreen beat off a challenge from
dancing Russian pensioners on Saturday to win a spectacular Eurovision Song
Contest in Azerbaijan that the host hoped would banish qualms over its rights
record. Loreen, 28, wowed voters with a catchy dance number called “Euphoria”
featuring an upbeat chorus accompanied by a high-kicking dance duet and a storm
of artificial snow.
She brandished the glass microphone trophy in a shower of
gold ticker-tape at a post-contest news conference.
“It's just a question of taste. This year it happened to
me,” she modestly explained her victory.
She hugged her mother and smiled, referring back to the
title of her song as she explained she felt at her win: “I know this sounds
corny, but euphoric.”
The victory brings Eurovision back to one of its heartlands.
Sweden's most famous band Abba gained worldwide fame after
winning the contest in 1974 with “Waterloo” -- for many the song that defined
the kitschy contest for all time.
“Hallelujah!” exlaimed the head of the Swedish delegation in
Baku, Christer Bjorkman at the news conference.
Loreen's win took Sweden's total of Eurovision trophies to
five, making it one of the most successful countries at winning the quirky
contest. But it last struck gold more than a decade ago in 1999.
Second place on Saturday went to Russia's heartwarming
Buranovskiye Babushki, a choir of elderly women from a village who performed a
disco song “Party for Everybody” in English and their local Finno-Ugric
language with a stove and a tray as props.
Third was Serbian Eurovision veteran Zelijko Joksimovic who
had already competed in three previous contests, once as a singer and twice as
a composer.
Eurovision is the biggest event ever hosted by energy-rich
Azerbaijan as it seeks to present a glitzy front to the world despite the
intolerance of dissent and opposition under the rule of the Aliyev dynasty.
AFP
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