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Miss
Canada crowned Miss Universe
Miss
Canada Natalie Glebova was crowned Miss Universe 2005 in Bangkok on May 31 2005
at the climax of a beauty pageant that once again managed to stumble into
controversy.
Glebova, a
23-year-old motivational speaker from Toronto, succeeded last year's winner,
Australian Jennifer Hawkins, after the usual evening gown and swimsuit parades
that pull in TV viewers worldwide but outrage feminists and traditionalists.
Even
though hotly tipped for the title, the final announcement appeared to stun
Glebova, who moved to Canada from her native Russia only 11 years ago.
"This is
all happening too fast and it's unreal. It's slowly starting to sink in," she
told reporters moments after being crowned with the glittering,
diamond-encrusted Miss Universe tiara.
Dressed in
a long white evening dress, she hugged her parents on stage and then praised her
new homeland for giving her and her family the chance to start a new life.
"When
we came 11 years ago, we came with nothing, and now we've got so much," she
said.
Miss
Puerto Rico Cynthia Olavarria, a 12-1 favourite according to on-line betting
service Sportsbook.com, came in second.
In all, 81
beauties from Albania to Zambia made it to Thailand, riding elephants, touring
temples and frolicking on tsunami-hit beaches in the run-up to Tuesday's finale,
which was broadcast live on Monday evening in North America.
In the
middle of the show, the conference hall fell silent for a minute in memory of
the more than 228,000 dead or missing from the Dec. 26 Indian Ocean tsunami.
Nearly 5,400 of the victims were in Thailand.
The
silence contrasted with some of the strident criticism leveled against the
54-year-old pageant in its earlier stages.
Photographs of bikini-clad contestants posing in front of Bangkok's famed "Watt
Arum", or "Temple of the Dawn", caused outrage among religious traditionalists
who said they were an affront to Buddhism.
Indonesia's first Miss Universe hopeful in nine years also sparked a storm back
home in the world's most populous Muslim nation with her decision to take part
in the swimsuit part of the competition.
Even
though 25-year-old law student Artika Sari Devi opted to wear a one-piece
swimsuit rather than the skimpier two-piece bikinis favored by most contestants,
conservatives reacted with anger, branding the pageant "pornography".
The Miss
Universe franchise is a partnership between real-estate tycoon Donald Trump and
US television network NBC.
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