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Oldies take on youth in controversial Eurovision

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  • Oldies take on youth in controversial Eurovision

    Agence France Presse
    May 26, 2012 Saturday 9:49 PM GMT


    Oldies take on youth in controversial Eurovision

    BAKU, May 26 2012

    Contenders from Russian grannies to a sultry Swedish starlet clashed
    Saturday as Azerbaijan hosted a glitzy Eurovision Song Contest that it
    hopes will banish qualms about its questionable rights record.

    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.

    The final's 26 acts lit up the spectacular Crystal Hall built to host
    the contest in barely half a year on the Caspian Sea, with an audience
    of some 20,000 inside the venue and 100 million television viewers.

    The favourite to win once votes are counted after 2200 GMT is Sweden's
    entry, Loreen, a 28-year-old singer who performed an upbeat number
    called "Euphoria" with high-kicking dance moves and a fake snowstorm.

    Also warming hearts were Russia's Buranovskiye Babushki, a choir of
    elderly women from a remote village who performed a song set to a
    disco beat, "Party for Everybody", with the unusual props of a model
    stove and a tray.

    Veteran crooner Engelbert Humperdinck opened the final representing
    Britain, with a ballad called "Love Will Set You Free." A star since
    the 1960s, he equals the eldest of the babushki in age at 76.

    In a sombre performance in a simple black suit, the singer famous for
    his links with Elvis Presley stood in a spotlight on stage with a
    dance duo and a violin player in the background.

    The competition got underway with a spectacular display of Azerbaijani
    folk dancing and a performance by last year's winners Ell and Nikki,
    whose surprise victory brought the event to Azerbaijan.

    The show included the usual range of the weird and exotic including a
    Norwegian rapper of Iranian origin, half-naked French gymnasts and an
    Albanian entry with a song solely in her native language and a truly
    terrifying top note.

    But the festive atmosphere was clouded by the detentions of dozens of
    opposition activists who attempted to hold several peaceful
    demonstrations calling for democratic freedoms in the
    tightly-controlled state.

    The Public Chamber opposition alliance said that more than 60
    protestors were detained Friday in the latest protest and a court
    sentenced three protesters to jail terms of five or six days.

    Azerbaijan is run by strongman President Ilham Aliyev, who succeeded
    his late father Heidar Aliyev in 2003.

    His wife Mehriban Aliyeva heads the organising committee and his
    son-in-law, Emin Agalarov, a Moscow-based businessman who also has
    launched a pop career, sang in a black leather jacket in a musical
    interlude after the voting.

    Radio Liberty reported this month that a construction company in the
    project to build the Crystal Hall venue in a city-commissioned project
    had links to the Aliyev family.

    The event was also far beyond the reach of ordinary Azerbaijanis, with
    tickets for the final starting at 160 manat ($204), half the monthly
    income of the average Azeri according to World Bank statistics.

    With political sensitivities never far from this Eurovision, the
    promotional videos shown included landscapes from Nagorny Karabakh,
    which Armenian separatists backed by Yerevan seized from Azerbaijan in
    a war in the 1990s.

    Armenia had pulled out of the contest saying it feared hostile
    treatment and Azerbaijan barred those who had visited Nagorny Karabakh
    from travelling to the contest.

    Rights activists have met Loreen of Sweden to brief her on the rights
    situation, but she declined to comment on her views on human rights at
    a news conference on Thursday.

    She also did not step away from the planned sequence during her
    performance in the final of the competition which is avowedly
    apolitical and where any political statement would be highly
    scandalous.

    One of the activists to meet Loreen, Rasul Jafarov who is coordinating
    a Sing for Democracy campaign during Eurovision, told AFP before the
    final that he felt she had been intimidated into keeping quiet.
    am/sjw/ach




    From: A. Papazian
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