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2011年5月16日星期一

Azerbaijan takes Eurovision crown

 14 May 2011 Last updated at 19:25 ET Next year's contest will be held in the winner's capital city of Baku

Azerbaijan has been crowned the winner of this year's Eurovision Song Contest in Germany, while the UK came 11th.


Eldar Gasimov and Nigar Jamal of Ell/Nikki were voted Europe's favourites, after scoring 221 points with their love song, Running Scared.


Newly reformed band Blue notched up 100 points, whilst Ireland's entry, X Factor twins Jedward, finished eighth.


Italy's Raphael Gualazzi took second place, followed by Eric Saade from Sweden.


'Happiest man'


It is the first time that Azerbaijan has won the contest in its 56-year history, having only joined Eurovision in 2008.


Although Jamal was born in Azerbaijan, she currently lives in north London with her husband and two daughters.


On receiving the trophy, Gasimov said he was the "the happiest man in the world".


It was another disappointing year for the UK, which has not won the competition since 1997, when Katrina and the Waves triumphed with Love Shine a Light.


However, Blue managed to notch up a respectable score compared with last year's entry, who came last with only 10 points.

At one stage Blue were top of the leaderboard

At one early stage during the voting process Bulgaria and Italy both awarded the UK high scores, making it briefly top of the results table.


Host Graham Norton joked: "Quick, someone take a picture."


Last year's winner Lena Mayer-Landrut, who represented Germany again, beat the UK by seven points to finish 10th.


Viewers at home in all 43 competing nations voted for their favourite song by phone or text message, which accounted for half of each country's vote.


The other 50% was determined by five-member expert juries in each participating country.


Two rounds of semi-finals held earlier in the week whittled the competitors down to 25 finalists.


The event, which was hosted by Anke Engelke, Judith Rakers and Stefan Raab, attracted 35,000 to the Fortuna Düsseldorf Arena.

2011年4月24日星期日

A Royal Wedding, a Tarnished Crown

LONDON — Outwardly, at least, this week’s royal pageant will bear a strong resemblance to the last of the great royal weddings, when Prince Charles married Lady Diana Spencer in 1981. Now, as then, a tall, slim young man in a crisply tailored military uniform will wed a bride so striking she has launched 10,000 magazine covers, offering to Britain and the world the promise of a monarchy alluringly renewed.

  CELEBRATION The wedding day of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer, in 1981.


This time, as last, the congregation will be led by an assembly of the world’s crowned heads, with a worldwide television audience of tens of millions. Once again, cheering crowds in central London will greet the newlyweds as a gilded carriage conveys them from their vows to a reception at Buckingham Palace.


Like that other happy dawn 30 years ago, too, Friday’s marriage will offer a respite, albeit fleeting, from a public mood weighed down by recession fears, unemployment and a government austerity program that has labor unions edging toward a season of paralyzing strikes.


But in other ways, the Britain of William and Kate is startlingly different from the country that celebrated so extravagantly, and so guilelessly, in 1981. For one thing, the monarchy’s survival is being questioned in a way it was not when Charles wed Diana. Among many in Britain, Friday’s ceremony, more than a rite of renewal, is viewed as a step toward saving the monarchy — and a far from certain one, at that — after a quarter of a century in which its foundations have been shaken as never before in modern times, by the soap opera that Charles and Diana’s marriage became as well as the dissolute behavior of many other royals.


Not that crowds are likely to storm the barricades. Still, there have been signs, among them a tepid take-up of Prime Minister David Cameron’s challenge to communities across the country to organize street parties, to suggest that the jubilation may be more muted than in 1981 — and for that matter, than amid the postwar gloom of 1947, when William’s grandmother Queen Elizabeth married Prince Philip.


For years, polls have been showing support for the monarchy running at levels that have made republicanism more than the marginal phenomenon it has been for most of modern times. While many Britons retain a bulletproof affection for the 85-year-old Elizabeth, their support beyond her seems conditional. This is especially so in the case of Prince Charles and Camilla, the Duchess of Cornwall; they stand first in line to the throne on Elizabeth’s death, but far behind Prince William and Miss Middleton in public preference. A clear majority in the polls favors the younger couple’s jumping past Charles and Camilla and acceding directly to the throne.


Often enough in English history, there has been more than a whiff of republicanism in the air — from Cromwell and the civil war in the 1640s to the decades of turmoil that followed Charles II’s restoration in 1660, and, in modern times, the public distemper that greeted Edward VIII’s abdication to marry the American divorcée Wallis Simpson in 1936. But in recent years, the royals have learned the hard way what the 19th-century constitutional scholar Walter Bagehot meant when he wrote of the imperative of mystery in the workings of the monarchy: “Above all things our royalty is to be reverenced, and if you begin to poke about it you cannot reverence it,” he wrote. “Its mystery is its life. We must not let in daylight upon magic.”


But daylight — a blinding searchlight, more like — has been thrown on the royals in recent times, and there has been much for the British public to dislike. There have been the serial divorces, with three of Elizabeth’s four children having abandoned their first marriages, exceeding the par set by surveys that show more than 40 percent of all British marriages failing. In the 1990s, there were sundry indiscretions, including the publication of the “Camilla-gate” tape recording of an intercepted cellphone call, in which Charles offered excruciating expressions of sexual yearning for Camilla. Most recently, there have been the tabloid revelations about dubious financial deals involving Prince Andrew, Charles’s younger brother, and some of the foreign potentates he has courted as Britain’s highest-ranking trade envoy.


 

2011年4月12日星期二

Crown to appeal police acquittal

 12 April 2011 Last updated at 04:13 ET  Ch Insp Tom Forrester was cleared at Aberdeen Sheriff Court last year The Crown is to appeal the acquittal of the former head of road policing for Grampian on dangerous driving allegations.


Ch Insp Tom Forrester was cleared at Aberdeen Sheriff Court last year.


It was claimed he had encouraged a colleague to drive dangerously in an unmarked police car with the siren and lights activated.


The vehicle they were travelling in was involved in a collision on the way to Aberdeen Airport in November 2008.


The crash happened on the B977 Belhelvie to Dyce road in Aberdeenshire.


The trial heard how Ch Insp Forrester and another colleague, Insp James Wood, were running late for a flight to Birmingham to attend a conference.


Ch Insp Forrester was further charged with violating the trust and duty of the force by failing to report the incident.


But Sheriff Kenneth Stewart cleared him of both charges.


Pc Ashley Forbes was found guilty of careless driving and failing to stop, but was given an absolute discharge.


The grounds of the Crown's appeal have not yet been made public.


Three judges will hear the appeal in Edinburgh next month.