Ukraine stuns Russia to win politically-charged Eurovision

Agence France-Presse

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Ukraine stuns Russia to win politically-charged Eurovision

EPA

Ukraine's Jamala wins the 61st edition of Eurovision Song Contest, Europe's annual kitsch fest of music, glitz and politics

STOCKHOLM, Sweden – Ukrainian singer Jamala snatched victory from arch-rival Russia to win the Eurovision song contest Saturday, May 14, adding a touch of political drama to the annual kitsch extravaganza.

After a tense vote count, during which it seemed Australia was going to run away with the crown until the audience votes came in, Jamala was declared the winner in Stockholm after a heart-felt performance of “1944”, a song about the deportations of Crimean Tatars during World War II.

Jamala’s entry – which stirred controversy over its perceived veiled criticism of Russia’s recent annexation of Crimea – scored 534 points, closely followed by Australia’s Dami Im with 511 points, the juries’ favourite.

The hotly tipped former Russian child star Sergey Lazarev came in third with 491 points.

“I really want the peace and love (for) everyone. Welcome to Ukraine,” said Jamal after she received the Eurovision trophy.

The stunning turnaround in the final minutes of the show capped an eventful 61st edition of the love-it-or-hate-it kitsch fest, which is expected to become the most-watched Eurovision yet since the event was first staged in 1956.

For the first time, scores were decided by national juries as well as viewers, a system intended to give fans the final say and give the outcome a more democratic feel – as well as adding a touch of last-minute suspense to the contest.

Among the evening’s other highlights was a guest appearance by US pop star Justin Timberlake, who wowed the Stockholm crowd with his hit “Rock Your Body” before performing his new single, the upbeat “Can’t Stop the Feeling”, which itself wouldn’t have sounded out of place in the Eurovision line-up.

In another sign of the contest’s growing appeal, Eurovision was broadcast live in the United States on the Logo channel, which is aimed at the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) community.

The show was also live-streamed on YouTube, giving Google a piece of a pie once reserved for European public broadcasters.

“The Eurovision Song Contest is now a truly global phenomenon,” producer Jon Ola Sand said, amid expectations that the show will push last year’s record of 197 million viewers worldwide.

‘In my blood’

Characterized by critics as a potpourri of bizarre performance antics, special effects and cheese, the light-hearted contest usually tries to avoid controversy and steer clear of geopolitics but this year was always going to be different.

Political leaders in Moscow and Crimea had initially sought to get Jamala’s song disqualified, arguing that it criticized Russia’s annexation of the Black Sea peninsula in March 2014.

The jury approved the lyrics nonetheless, setting the stage for a monumental confrontation.

Inspired by Jamala’s great-grandmother’s story, “1944” recounts the deportation of the Crimean Tatars by Soviet strongman Joseph Stalin, and she sings it partly in the Tatar language, she says, because “it’s in my blood.”

The song has resonance for contemporary Ukraine, where memories of that horror were revived by Russia’s seizure of Crimea and Jamala’s poignant lyrics tell the story of a people with a history of persecution that continues to this day.

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko was among the first to congratulate Jamala on her victory.

“Yes!!!” Poroshenko tweeted. “An unbelievable performance and victory! All of Ukraine gives you its heartfelt thanks, Jamala.”

Ahead of showtime, bookies had tipped Russia’s Lazarev and his catchy “You Are the Only One” tune to win the contest between 26 finalists – 25 Europeans and one Australian.

Lazarev, popular in his own country and eastern European nations, has built an eventful career as a singer, actor and TV host.

He has also drawn admiration from gay rights campaigners for speaking out against his country’s climate of homophobia.

Earlier this month he told Sweden’s QX gay magazine that he was happy for fans to wave rainbow flags at his performance, saying he respects his gay fans and they respect him.

Guest competitor Australia also lived up to its billing as a frontrunner, cementing its reputation as a country to be reckoned with in its second year of competition after first being invited to last year’s anniversary edition.

South Korean-born Dami Im, 27, a classically trained pianist and former X-Factor winner, won over the national juries with her slick performance of “Sound of Silence”, but in the end it was the viewers who decided it wasn’t quite enough to beat Jamala’s performance. – Hugues Honore, AFP / Rappler.com

 

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