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Eurovision: 7th-place finish for Armenia in German-dominated final

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  • Eurovision: 7th-place finish for Armenia in German-dominated final

    Eurovision: Seventh-place finish for Armenia in German-dominated final

    Arts and Culture | 30.05.10 | 11:47

    Photo: www.eurovision.tv

    By Suren Musayelyan
    ArmeniaNow Deputy Editor


    Armenia finished seventh in the 25-nation Eurovision final on its
    fifth appearance in Europe's biggest pop music contest on Saturday.

    The winner of one of the world's most-watched events on television
    this year was betting agencies' favorite Lena Meyer-Lundrut from
    Germany with her catchy pop song `Satellite'. The 19-year-old from
    Hanover earned 246 points in a combined vote by viewers and national
    juries in 39 countries.

    Turkish rock band maNga (170 points) and Romania's duet of Paula
    Seling and Ovi (162 points) finished second and third, respectively,
    at the Grand Finale in Oslo, Norway.


    Enlarge Photo
    Lena Meyer-LundrutEva Rivas representing Armenia finished in the
    seventh position with 141 points. The 22-year-old native of
    Rostov-na-Donu in southern Russia provided the country's arguably best
    executed entry so far with her upbeat `Apricot Stone' song about
    nostalgia for Motherland symbolized by an apricot pit. The
    three-minute show also featuring Armenian duduk maestro Jivan
    Gasparyan was warmly greeted by the Telenor Arena audience of some
    18,000.

    Numerous Armenian fans, meanwhile, had gathered around a small
    man-made pond in central Yerevan, Karapi Lich, for a live big screen
    watching of the show that ended only at around 3.15 am Yerevan time.
    (The Eurovision finals had been watched live by an estimated 120
    million TV viewers in some 45 countries).

    Armenia's entry was only four points short of Azerbaijan's
    representative Safura who finished in the fifth place with her song,
    `Drip Drop'.

    In the televoting by 39 countries Armenia's highest points, 12, came
    from Russia, the Netherlands and Israel. Georgia gave Armenia 10
    points, while Spain and Bulgaria provided 8 points each. The other
    countries that supported Armenia were: Germany, Greece, Cyprus,
    Belgium (all 7 points); Romania, Turkey, France, Ukraine, Moldova (6
    points); Poland, Belarus (5 points); Slovakia, FYR Macedonia (4
    points); Serbia, Latvia, Sweden (1 point).

    (Armenia's entry in Eurovision 2009 got only one 12-pointer, from
    Czechs, and took the 10th place. The best result for Armenia so far
    was provided by singer Sirusho who finished just outside the top three
    in 2008).

    Meanwhile, Armenia this year gave its 12 points to Georgia, 10 points
    to Russia and 8 points to Ukraine.

    The Oslo contest did not pass without some off-stage bickering between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan reflecting the standoff between the two South
    Caucasus neighbors in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

    In particular, after the semifinal featuring representatives of both
    countries, Baku protested the exclusion by the organizers of
    Nagorno-Karabakh and `other occupied territories' from the map of
    Azerbaijan demonstrated before the performance of the Azeri singer.
    Baku still considers the de-facto independent Armenian republic to be
    a part of its territory. Also, the Azeri delegation protested the
    presence of a Karabakh flag in the Telenor Arena in Oslo during the
    Thursday semifinal. The security in the arena reportedly did not meet
    the Azeri requests to remove the flag, reasoning that they were not
    intervening in `political affairs.'

    More information and results from this year's song contest in Olso are
    available on Eurovision's official website www.eurovision.tv




    From: A. Papazian
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