Google – AFP, Gde Putra Wicaksana (AFP), 28 Sep 2013
Nusa Dua —
Miss Philippines was crowned Miss World 2013 in a glittering finale Saturday on
the Indonesian resort island of Bali, amid tight security following weeks of
hardline Muslim protests.
Hundreds of
Islamic radicals held a prayer session in a mosque near the capital to express
their anger, while Megan Young wept as she won the coveted title on
Hindu-majority Bali at the end of a three-week contest.
The
23-year-old, wearing a pearl white gown, promised to be "the best Miss
World ever" in front of a cheering crowd, which included many Filipinos,
in a venue guarded by heavily armed police and water cannons.
New Miss
World, Megan Young (C), from the
Philippines is congratulated by outgoing Miss
World Yu Wenxia (L) after winning the crown
during the Miss World 2013 (AFP, Romeo Gacad) |
Denouncing
the pageant as a "whore contest" and "pornography", the
demonstrators pressured authorities into shifting the venue, the latest sign of
the growing influence of country's hardline fringe.
Hundreds of
police were deployed across Bali for Saturday's final, which saw 127
contestants clad in stilettos and shimmering gowns take to the stage in the
Nusa Dua resort, southern Bali.
The
contestants were quickly whittled down to six. Then, they faced a
question-and-answer round before the winner was announced in a contest
broadcast to more than 180 countries.
Young, the
first ever Philippine Miss World, took the crown from last year's winner,
China's Yu Wenxia.
Young, who
is studying digital media and also presents TV shows in the Philippines,
pledged to "just be myself in everything I do, to share what I know and to
educate people".
France's
Marine Lorphelin was second, while Ghana's Carranzar Naa Okailey Shooter came
in third.
Adding to
security concerns in the run-up to the final, the American, British and
Australian embassies had warned that extremists might attack the pageant.
Bali has
suffered extremist attacks before, notably in 2002 when bombings killed more
than 200 people, most of them foreign tourists.
But
Saturday's finale passed off smoothly, with no new protests or security scares
-- despite a pledge by prominent hardline group the Islamic Defenders' Front
(FPI) to stage demonstrations.
Hundreds of
members of the FPI and other hardline groups limited themselves to holding a
prayer session in a mosque in Sentul, just outside the capital Jakarta, to
express their opposition to the pageant.
Miss
Philippines Megan Young (C) is seen on the catwalk with other Miss World
contestants in Nusa Dua, on the Indonesian island of Bali on September 24,
2013
(AFP/File, Sonny Tumbelaka)
|
Organisers
had originally planned to hold the final in a 10,000-seat venue in Sentul,
before being forced to move to a 2,000-seat centre in Nusa Dua.
Those at
the prayer gathering were addressed by a Muslim preacher who lashed out at the
pageant, which radicals claim goes against Islamic teaching, said FPI member
Ustad Maman.
"Indonesia
has already shown how it feels about Miss World -- we rejected it here, we
reject it anywhere," he told AFP.
Maman said
that 5,000 FPI members showed up for the prayer session, although police put
the figure at 1,000.
Muslim
hardliners hold an anti-Miss
World protest in Jakarta on September 6,
2013 (AFP/File, Bay Ismoyo)
|
Last year, Lady Gaga axed a concert after threats to burn down the venue and criticism for wearing only "a bra and panties".
In a bid to
reduce hardline anger, organisers also took an early decision this year to axe
the famed bikinis from the "beach fashion" round, replacing them with
Balinese sarongs.
A total of
129 contestants had been due to compete in the final, but two pulled out at the
last minute, according to organisers.
While the
popularity of Miss World, first held in 1951, has waned in the West, continued
interest in Asian countries ensures that the final rakes in a huge global
television audience.
Venezuela
has produced the most Miss Worlds, with six winners, while India and Britain
claim five titles each.
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