Sat | Dec 21, 2024

Miss Universe is India's Harnaaz Sandhu, 70th winner

Published:Sunday | December 12, 2021 | 11:44 PM
India's Harnaaz Sandhu waves after being crowned Miss Universe 2021 during the 70th Miss Universe pageant.
India's Harnaaz Sandhu waves after being crowned Miss Universe 2021 during the 70th Miss Universe pageant.
From left: South Africa's Lalela Mswane, India's Harnaaz Sandhu and Paraguay's Nadia Ferreira advance to the top three during the 70th Miss Universe pageant, in Eilat, Israel.
From left: South Africa's Lalela Mswane, India's Harnaaz Sandhu and Paraguay's Nadia Ferreira advance to the top three during the 70th Miss Universe pageant, in Eilat, Israel.
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EILAT , Israel ( AP ):

Harnaaz Sandhu of India was crowned the 70th Miss Universe on Sunday, topping a field of some 80 contestants in a pageant that was touched by politics and the pandemic.

The previously reigning Miss Universe, Andrea Meza of Mexico, crowned her successor, a Bollywood actress, in the Israeli Red Sea resort town of Eilat.

Miss Universe Paraguay Nadia Ferreira was the first runner-up, while Miss Universe South Africa Lalela Mswane was named first runner-up. Jamaica's Daena Soares did not make it to the Top 16.

Miss Universe Bahamas Chantel O'Brian, who made it to the Top 16 — the first in the pageant's history that the island has progressed that far — took home the Spirit of Carnival award.

The pageant was held in the middle of the night, wrapping up at 5 a.m. local time (10 p.m. EST) to accommodate the prime time schedule in the US.

It included traditional displays of national costumes, swimwear and a series of interview questions to test contestants' public speaking skills. The top 10 showed off intricately bedazzled full-length gowns in either gold, silver or bronze. The Philippines' Beatrice Luigi Gomez wore an asymmetrical cut dress with one sleeve, highlighting a new tattoo she said "celebrates her womanhood".

But the contest also drew attention in recent weeks for other reasons.

A grassroots Palestinian-led boycott had urged contestants to skip the event to protest Israel's treatment of the Palestinians.

In the end, only Malaysia, a predominantly Muslim country with close ties to the Palestinians, did not send a representative, citing the global COVID-19 situation. The South African government, which also strongly supports the Palestinian cause, withdrew support for the country's representative over her participation.

In an interview last month, Meza urged contestants to leave politics out of the pageant, saying the gathering was meant to bring together women from different backgrounds. "When you are in there, you forget about politics, about your religion," she told The Associated Press at the time.

Sara Salansky, an official with the Israeli Tourism Ministry, said the country was selected to host the contest earlier this year because of Israel's successful coronavirus vaccination programme.

The contest suffered a last-minute hiccup with the arrival of the omicron variant, which forced Israel to close its borders to foreign tourists late last month.

Most of the Miss Universe contestants were already in the country before the new regulations came into effect. But those who came afterwards were given special permission to enter, albeit with a mandatory 72-hour quarantine period.

Throughout the run-up to Sunday's contest, all contestants were tested for the coronavirus every 48 hours and required to obey strict mask requirements.

Amid all the safeguards, France's contestant, Clemence Botino, tested positive for COVID-19 shortly after arriving in Israel. After 10 days in quarantine, she was declared virus-free last week and allowed to rejoin the competition.

Last year's pageant was delayed due to the pandemic before Meza was crowned in May for her abbreviated tenure.

US TV personality Steve Harvey hosted Sunday's contest. Organisers said the pageant was expected to reach an estimated 600 million viewers via the FOX network in 172 countries.

entertainment@gleanerjm.com