YouTuber Ali-A Joins Fortnite Icon Series

Continuing the Fortnite Icon Series fresh off of last week’s Chica skin, comes the new Ali-A skin. Epic Games continues to add skins that either depict or are inspired by real-life people into the game, with offerings like Olympic snowboarder Chloe Kim getting her own skin or the Wu-Tang Clan getting their Wu Wear bundles in the Item Shop. UK-based YouTuber Ali-A is the latest addition to this lineup, with his years of work in the Fortnite content creation scene culminating in him being added to the game.

Epic is using their Fortnite Icon Series, as well as an in-game competition and creative experience, to showcase his five-year career and cement his status as a key member in the Fortnite content creation space. Starting May 19 at 5 PM PT / 8 PM ET, Ali’s fans will be able to pick up his Icon Series set from the item shop. The set will include the Ali-A outfit with eight different styles as well as multiple color and lighting options, along with customizable back bling and a glider that’s built into the outfit.

There will also be a Zero Build Duos Cup for players to compete to earn the skin in, and a creative experience showcasing bits of both Ali-A’s career and Fortnite’s history. A new quest to eliminate 15 opponents at the Ali-A experience will also be available for the experience’s duration, unlocking the Ali-A Was Here spray for all who complete it. For other skins, check out our list of all the Marvel skins currently in Fortnite or find out how to unlock the free Splash Squadron skin here.

GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Taylor Swift Shows Support for BF Joe Alwyn for New TV Series Debut

Taylor Swift and Joe Alwyn‘s love story continues with a sweet gesture.

On May 15, the singer publicly expressed support for her boyfriend in a rare Instagram Story post, sharing a positive Time magazine review of the new series Conversations With Friends, which stars the actor. Taylor wrote, “Can confirm it’s phenomenal,” and added that the series is “out now.” It debuted that day on Hulu.

While Taylor and Joe have kept their relationship largely out of the spotlight since they began dating more than five years ago, she has shown support for him online before.

In February, Taylor liked a post that Joe shared about being cast in Conversations With Friends. In December, the singer liked a post the actor shared that contained pics from the set of his movie The Stars at Noon.

A month earlier, Taylor visited Joe on location. She has also joined him at film premieres, the 2020 Golden Globes and other celebrity events. However, the two have yet to make their red carpet debut as a couple.



Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Steve Kerr is back – TalkBasket.net

Photo: Getty Images

According to Anthony Slater of The Athletic, the Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr has cleared protocol and is back with the team ahead of the Western Conference finals.

Said he stayed in touch with the coaches and players during his absence: “I left (Mike Brown) alone a couple hours before the game.” Said he wanted to get out of Brown’s way so he could “follow his gut” on game nights.



Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Chiefs rookie and admitted former Browns fan ditches all bias

It’s tough for any rookie coming into the NFL to drop their childhood fandom, but it’s necessary to survive and thrive in the business for Chiefs rookie Mike Rose.

Rose came in as an undrafted free agent from Iowa State, but his roots are in Brecksville, Ohio, which is a suburb of Cleveland. So, it’s easy to see how Rose grew up a Browns fan, and maintained that fandom during his college years at ISU.

Unfortunately — or fortunately, depending on how you look at it — Rose was not drafted by Cleveland, instead forced to find a new home as a UDFA. When the Chiefs came calling, he jumped at the opportunity.

“I definitely grew up a Browns fan but as this became more reality to me, obviously you can’t pick favorites,” Rose said. “A lot of waiting, but I think every team had their different reason for passing up on me…I’m just super glad to have an opportunity here at this great organization. I’m just looking forward to doing my thing in minicamp and making the 53.”

What can Mike Rose bring to the Kansas City Chiefs?

Rose was a two-time First-Team All-Big 12 winner and earned Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year honors in 2020. He’s the kind of decorated college player who rarely goes undrafted, and now has a giant chip on his shoulder.

Making the roster won’t be easy for Rose. The top of the linebacking corps includes Willie Gay Jr., Nick Bolton and Leo Chanal. Behind those three are veterans Darius Harris, Jermaine Carter Jr., and Elijah Lee. If Rose is to beat out even half of the names on that list, he’ll have to make quite the impression in minicamp and beyond.

“I wasn’t highly recruited out of high school,” Rose said. “I had to earn my spot in college. This chip on my shoulder and being counted out, it doesn’t feel all too different to me honestly.”

If anything, that sort familiarity and mentality should work out in Rose’s favor.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Somalia Elects Next President, but Terrorists Hold True Power

MOGADISHU, Somalia — Every month, Abdow Omar, who runs a business importing flour and sugar, gets a call from the Somali militant group Al Shabab reminding him that it’s time to pay them taxes — or risk losing his business, or even his life.

After more than 16 years, the Shabab, terrorists linked to Al Qaeda, now have a firm grip on much of Somalia — extorting taxes, judging court cases, forcibly recruiting minors into its forces and carrying out suicide bombings.

As lawmakers voted Sunday to select Somalia’s next leader, in an election delayed for almost two years, 35 candidates, including one woman, were vying to unseat the incumbent president.

As the counting for the first round of voting got underway, several loud explosions could be heard near the lawmakers’ fortified compound, which also houses embassies, United Nations offices and the city’s international airport. The voting continued undisturbed, winnowing the candidates to four, including President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed and Said Abdullahi Deni, the leader of the northeastern state of Puntland.

But many residents, observing the government’s infighting and paralysis, are asking whether a new administration will make a difference at all.

“While the government is busy with itself, we are suffering,” said Mr. Omar, who pays the militants about $4,000 a year. “The Shabab are like a mafia group. You either have to obey them or close your business. There’s no freedom.”

Somalia, a nation of 16 million people strategically located in the Horn of Africa, has suffered for decades from civil war, weak governance and terrorism. Its central government has been bolstered by African Union peacekeepers and Western aid, including billions of dollars in humanitarian aid and security assistance from the United States, which sought to keep the country from becoming a safe haven for international terrorism.

Now, inflation is climbing, and food prices are sharply on the rise because of a biting drought and the loss of wheat imports from Ukraine.

The country doesn’t have a one-person, one-vote electoral system. Instead, 328 lawmakers, who were chosen by clan representatives, will select the next president.

The candidates, who include former presidents and prime ministers, are looking to succeed Mr. Mohamed, who has served for five years. Critics accused Mr. Mohamed — a former U.S. citizen and bureaucrat — of trying to stay in power illegally, cracking down on the opposition and journalists, fomenting a rift with neighboring Kenya and undercutting the power-sharing model that buttressed the country’s federal system.

Al Shabab exploited the political instability, and the bitter divisions among security forces, to grow their tentacles. In the weeks and months before the vote, the group killed civilians including at beachside restaurants, mounted a major offensive on an African Union base — killing at least 10 peacekeepers from Burundi — and dispatched suicide bombers to jump on the cars of government officials.

In interviews with more than two dozen Somali citizens, lawmakers, analysts, diplomats and aid workers before Sunday’s vote, many expressed concern at how the deteriorating political, security and humanitarian situation had reversed the few years of stability the nation achieved after Al Shabab were kicked out of the capital in 2011.

“These were five lost years, ones in which we lost the cohesion of the country,” said Hussein Sheikh-Ali, a former national security adviser to President Mohamed and the chairman of the Hiraal Institute, a research center in Mogadishu.

The protracted political battles, particularly over the elections, undermined the government’s ability to deliver key services, observers say. Critics and opposition figures have accused Mr. Mohamed of trying to cling to power at all costs, exerting pressure on the electoral commission, installing leaders in regional states who would help sway the election and trying to fill the Parliament with his own supporters. Last year, when he signed a law extending his tenure by two years, fighting broke out in the capital’s streets, forcing him to change course.

As the election of lawmakers got underway, observers said it was rife with corruption and irregularities.

Abdi Ismail Samatar, a first time senator who is also a professor at the University of Minnesota who researches democracy in Africa, said this election could be ranked as “the worst” in Somalia’s history.

“I don’t think I could have ever imagined how corrupt and self-serving it is,” Mr. Samatar said. While no one attempted to bribe him, he said, “I saw people being given money in the election for the speakership right in front of my face in the hallway.”

Larry E. André Jr., the U.S. ambassador to Somalia, said that the majority of the seats had been selected by regional leaders, “sold” or “auctioned,” and that the messy election had pushed the country to the “cliff’s edge.”

The United States imposed visa sanctions in both February and March on Somali officials and others accused of undermining the parliamentary elections. The parliamentary vote finally concluded in late April, producing new speakers and deputy speakers mostly aligned with groups opposed to President Mohamed.

Because of the indirect nature of the vote, presidential candidates in Mogadishu aren’t shaking hands with citizens or campaigning in the streets. Instead, they are meeting with lawmakers and clan elders in glitzy hotels and compounds guarded by dozens of soldiers and blast walls. Some aspirants have put up election billboards along major roads in the capital, promising good governance, justice and peace.

But few in this seaside city believe they would make good on their pledges.

“Everyone wears a suit, carries a briefcase and promises to be as sweet as honey,” said Jamila Adan, a political science student at City University. “But we don’t believe them.”

Her friend Anisa Abdullahi, a business major, agreed, saying those running for office cannot identify with the daily tribulations facing ordinary Somalis. Security forces, she said, frequently block roads unannounced to create safe corridors for politicians, making it impossible for her and many others to get to class, do business or visit relatives.

“They never make people feel like the government comes from the people and is supposed to serve the people,” she said.

Some Somalis have now turned to the Shabab to get services that would normally be delivered by a functioning state. Many in Mogadishu regularly travel to areas dozens of miles north of the city to get their cases heard at Shabab-operated mobile courts.

One of them is Ali Ahmed, a businessman from a minority tribe whose family home in Mogadishu was occupied for years by members of a powerful tribe. After he presented his case to a Shabab-run court, Mr. Ahmed said, two weeks later the court ruled that the occupiers should vacate his house — and they did.

“It’s sad, but no one goes to the government to get justice,” he said. “Even government judges will secretly advise you to go to Al Shabab.”

Some officials admit the government’s own shortcomings. Al Shabab have been able to widen their tax base because “elected officials were too busy politicking instead of doing policy work,” said one government official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of lack of authorization to speak to the media.

The election comes as parts of Somalia face the worst drought in four decades. Some six million people, or about 40 percent of the population, are facing extreme food shortages, according to the World Food Program, with nearly 760,000 people displaced.

Many of those impacted by the drought live in Shabab-controlled areas in south-central Somalia, where aid organizations are not able to reach them, crops are failing and the Shabab demand taxes on livestock, according to interviews with officials and displaced people. The United Nations estimates that almost 900,000 people reside in inaccessible areas administered by Al Shabab.

To find food and water, families travel hundreds of miles, sometimes on foot, to cities and towns like Mogadishu, and Doolow in the southern Gedo region. Some parents said they buried their children on the way while others left weak children behind in order to save other offspring.

Mohammed Ali Hussein, the deputy governor of Gedo, said the lack of security prevented officials from rescuing people in Shabab-dominated areas even when family members pinpoint an exact location.

Dealing with the threat of the Shabab will be among the first challenges facing Somalia’s next government, said Afyare Abdi Elmi, executive director of the Heritage Institute for Policy Studies in Mogadishu.

But the next leader, he said, needs also to deliver a new constitution, reform the economy, deal with climate change, open dialogue with the breakaway region of Somaliland and unite a polarized nation.

“Governance in Somalia became too confrontational over the past few years. It was like pulling teeth,” Mr. Elmi said. “People are now ready for a new dawn.”

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

World leaders descend on UAE to pay respects to late ruler

Placeholder while article actions load

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — An array of presidents and prime ministers continued to descend on the United Arab Emirates Sunday from around the world to pay their respects to the federation’s late ruler. They also came to praise his successor, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan — a vivid sign of Abu Dhabi’s influence in Western and Arab capitals.

The first Western leader to jet to the oil-rich emirate was French President Emmanuel Macron. He met with Sheikh Mohammed to pay tribute to Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the long-ailing ruler who died Friday at the age of 73 after years presiding over the country’s rapid transformation into a global business hub and regional power center.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson arrived later Sunday to offer condolences, along with other leaders including Israel’s president after the two countries opened formal relations in 2020.

A high-profile American delegation led by Vice President Kamala Harris is due to visit the UAE on Monday, a bid to ease tensions and show support as relations between the countries have strained under President Joe Biden. The delegation will include the U.S. secretary of state, secretary of defense and CIA director, among others.

“He was respected by all for the values of peace, openness and dialogue that he embodied,” Macron wrote on Twitter of Sheikh Khalifa, expressing “full support” for the ascension of his half-brother Sheikh Mohammed after rulers in the federation unanimously appointed him as president.

As crown prince of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Mohammed has served as the nation’s de facto leader since Sheikh Khalifa suffered a stroke in 2014. He has turned the small UAE — population 10 million — into one of the most influential Arab states. With Abu Dhabi’s petrodollars and substantial military along with Dubai’s major firms and glitzy hotels, the UAE has come to wield outsized power across the Middle East and Africa.

Even as the country became entangled in the bloody, yearslong conflict in Yemen and a chaotic proxy war in Libya, it positioned itself as a savvy and reliable partner in Western capitals.

Paris and Abu Dhabi have become increasingly aligned in recent years, sharing a deep mistrust of Islamist movements like the Muslim Brotherhood across the region, including in Turkey and Libya.

France opened a major overseas naval base in Abu Dhabi. French warplanes and personnel are also stationed at a facility outside the Emirati capital. The two governments jointly built a gleaming branch of the Louvre museum in the emirate.

During Macron’s visit to Dubai last December, France clinched its biggest overseas order for its Rafale combat jet with the UAE — an $18 billion deal that came as a planned U.S. sale of advanced F-35 fighter jets to the UAE stalled in part over American concerns about the Emirates’ relationship with China.

British Prime Minister Johnson, for his part, said his visit to mourn Sheikh Khalifa showed “the deep ties which unite our countries will continue through our cooperation and friendship.”

It marked Johnson’s second trip this year to the desert sheikhdom, a leading investor in the United Kingdom and key export market after Britain’s exit from the European Union. In March Johnson met with Sheikh Mohammed to persuade him to boost oil production and soothe energy markets after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — ultimately to no avail.

Queen Elizabeth II also congratulated Sheikh Mohammed on his assumption of power and praised her country’s “strong and historic bonds” with the UAE, a former British protectorate.

Sheikh Mohammed’s assertive foreign policy in the Arab world was on stark display as allied leaders rushed to the capital on Saturday to express sorrow over Sheikh Khalifa’s death and congratulate Sheikh Mohammed on his formal ascension to power.

Among the first was Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi, the Egyptian general who, with Gulf Arab support, overthrew an elected but divisive Islamist government in 2013.

Emirati-backed Tunisian President Kais Saied, who has amassed nearly absolute power in the country since dismissing the prime minister last year, also flew in to pay tribute, along with Jordan’s King Abdullah II and Iraq’s president and prime minister.

Sudan’s Abdel-Fattah Burhan, the general who led the coup in the strategic east African nation last year, has made frequent visits to key backer Sheikh Mohammed. He posted footage on social media Saturday sprinting up stairs to board his plane to Abu Dhabi to honor the late Emirati president.

The UAE’s recent deal to normalize ties with Israel, borne from mutual enmity for Iran, is also indicative of Sheikh Mohammed’s quietly assertive foreign policy. Before Israel’s largely ceremonial President Isaac Herzog took off for Abu Dhabi on Sunday, he offered words of gratitude for the Emirates’ leaders.

“The partnership between our countries is an asset for us and for the whole region and it has been built and is still being built by bold and groundbreaking leaders,” he said.

Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani made his first visit to the UAE on Sunday since 2017, when the Emirates joined a Saudi-led boycott of the tiny energy-rich state over its support for Islamists. The Arab states dropped their embargo and reopened borders last year, although relations remain chilly between Abu Dhabi and Doha.

Meanwhile, Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia’s own upstart crown prince who has had a close relationship with Sheikh Mohammed, delivered his condolences on the phone.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Riders edge Lions in Playoff final classic

A big fourth quarter catapulted Leicester Riders to a season treble by edging London Lions 78-75 at the O2.

A BBL Playoff final that featured the very best of what British basketball can offer played in-front of 15,824. Both teams left everything on the floor in a nailbiting slugfest.

It was closely fought throughout, but Leicester took the initiative when it mattered.

A 13-0 run, en route to taking the final ten minutes 21-10 ultimately sealed the win for the Riders.

“What a game,” said Riders coach Rob Paternsotro afterwards. “I think when you come here for this big event, you want a great game and we got that today.

“I thought that the nine players that played today made a contribution and that’s been all year for us.”

Player of the Year, Geno Crandall led Leicester with 23 points, seven rebounds and five assists as he added Playoff finals MVP to his bulging cabinet.

“It was a battle, a game of runs,” Crandall said. “We were fortunate enough to play at our best at the end of the game.”

A successful season for this Leicester side, who backed up their dominant league season with a stunning playoff campaign, showing that they were head and shoulders above the rest.

For London, despite battling to the final seconds will see this season as a massive disappointment. A domestic campaign, that saw them finish without a trophy despite a strong roster and deep pockets.

It will certainly be an interesting off-season in the capital as Lions will regroup and recharge.

Isaiah Reese led all scorers but in vain with 29 points.

Lions certainly had a strong home-town following and they started hot. Scores from Reese and Julian Washburn gave them a 19-11 lead, which was soon extended to 27-17.

Riders began to show their championship credentials in the second period by wearing down the Lions and getting their points from the foul line, eventually taking the lead and maintaining it heading into the third.

But London, eager to impress the loud home following inside the O2 found a higher gear and instigated by seven points in the quarter from Lorenzo Cugini, enjoyed a 61-51 lead.

Leicester chipped away slowly and at the start of the fourth made their move. A 13-0 run put them on top again as London couldn’t buy a bucket.

Nearly six minutes into the final quarter passed when the energetic Chris Taiwah muscled his way for a three-point play to score London’s first field goal and keep them interested.

Crandall though stepped up with big plays to take Riders over the line, despite a huge scare in the last seconds.

It was Crandall himself that took care of business, intercepting a pass from Reese who was looking to get a shot off to potentially take the game to overtime.

MORE TO FOLLOW…

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

See Lizzo Perform This Viral Moulin Rouge! Song On TikTok

“THIS [flame emojis]!!!” wrote Ashley Loren, who currently stars in the show as its sparkling diamond Satine. “Come join us onstage at @Moulin Rouge! The Musical Broadway ASAP!!!” 

On his own Instagram Story, Aaron also shared his delight over Lizzo’s cover, writing, “Ohhkkkk @lizzobeeating.” He also added a few clapping emojis.  

And one TikTok fan spoke for all of us when they wrote, “IM READY FOR LIZZO’S BROADWAY DEBUT!!!” 

This isn’t the first time Lizzo has shared her love of musical theater on her TikTok account.  

She recently revealed that she “would’ve given,” well, just about anything to attend the Spring Awakening reunion show last November alongside a hilarious video teaching viewers how to perform the dance routine to her latest single.  

Hopefully, it won’t be too long ‘til we see her on stage! 

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Paulo Dybala sends farewell message to Juventus fans


 

 

Juventus star Paulo Dybala has taken to social media on Sunday, to send a farewell message to the Juventus fanbase.

The long-awaited bombshell news surrounding the future of Argentine international Dybala was of course made official late in March.

On the back of a meeting between those in a position of power at the Juventus Stadium, and the representatives of the club’s long-time star attacker, the conclusion was reached that the best route forward would be for Dybala’s terms in Turin not to be renewed.

The 28-year-old, as a result, is in line to depart as a free agent upon the conclusion of the 2021/22 campaign.

ALLIANZ STADIUM, TURIN, ITALY – 2022/04/16: Paulo Dybala looks on during the Serie A football match between Juventus FC and Bologna FC. The match ended 1-1 tie. (Photo by Nicolò Campo/LightRocket via Getty Images)

And now, as alluded to above, Dybala himself has finally broken his silence.

Ahead of lining out in front of the Juventus faithful for the final time against Lazio on Monday, the former Palermo standout has taken to his official social media platforms, to send a heartfelt message to all associated with the club.

The statement, which reiterates the fact that Dybala expected to spend ‘even more years’ in Turin, can be read in its entirety below:

”It is difficult to find the right words to greet you, there are so many years and so many emotions involved, all together… I thought we would be together even more years, but fate puts us on different paths. I will never forget everything you made me experience, every game, every goal. With you I grew up, I learned, I lived and I dreamed. It has been 7 years of magic, 12 trophies and 115 goals that no one will take away from us. Never. Thank you for supporting me in difficult times. Thanks to those who have accompanied me over the years: from the first to the last, from the fans to the people who work within the club, everyone, coaches and teammates, employees and managers. Wearing this important jersey together with the captain’s armband has been one of the greatest prides of my life, which I hope to show to my children and grandchildren someday. Tomorrow will be my last match with this shirt, it’s hard to imagine, but it will be our last farewell. It will not be easy, but I will enter the field with a smile and with my head held high, knowing that I have given everything for you.”

Arsenal bound?

Coincidentally, Dybala’s message to his fellow Juventini comes fresh off the back of rumours mounting over the course of the last 48 hours that a summer switch to the Premier League could be on the cards for the Argentine.

Speculation in the Italian media has pointed towards Mikel Arteta’s Arsenal as an altogether realistic potential landing spot, albeit only in the case that the Gunners manage to carve out a place for themselves in next season’s Champions League.

 

AC Milan vs Atalanta live streaming: Watch Serie A online

Mikel Arteta provides White & Gabriel fitness updates before Arsenal’s trip to Newcastle

 




Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Latest Russia-Ukraine War news: Live updates

Fresh off its Eurovision win, Ukrainian band Kalush Orchestra posted a music video early Sunday for “Stefania,” the song that secured its first-place finish at the popular music contest.

The video portrays Ukrainian soldiers as heroes and features heart-tugging scenes of destruction that were filmed in war-torn areas near Kyiv. It is the latest example of Ukraine’s use of cultural diplomacy amid its conflict with Russia.

The video opens with members of Kalush Orchestra walking through the ruins of bombed-out buildings, as Ukrainian service members carry children to safety through fire and other hazards. The children are reunited with their families in refugee centers and train stations, as the service members — all women — stare into the camera, some of them in tears.

The video ends with a shot of a young girl holding what appears to be a molotov cocktail, followed by a message from the band. “This video was filmed in Bucha, Irpin, Borodyanka, Hostomel, cities near Kyiv that suffered the horrors of Russian occupation,” it reads. The video is dedicated to “the brave Ukrainian people,” the “mothers protecting children” and to “those who gave their lives to our freedom,” it says.

“Stefania,” the song that Kalush Orchestra frontman Oleh Psiuk wrote for his mother, plays in the background. Despite its personal origins, the song for many Ukrainians has taken on a new, more universal meaning after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Psiuk has said.

Another Ukrainian band, Antytila, recently collaborated with Ed Sheeran on a remix of Sheeran’s single “2step.” The accompanying music video also features scenes of destroyed buildings in Ukraine. Antytila’s lead singer, who volunteered to fight Russia alongside others in the band, sings in military uniform about wanting to be reunited with loved ones after the war.

Kalush Orchestra won Eurovision with “Stefania” on Saturday, and the music video for the song illustrates how Ukraine has at times placed music, film and other forms of art at the service of political aims. The members of Kalush Orchestra received special permission to travel to Italy for Eurovision, even though Ukraine has banned most men between 18 and 60 from leaving the country in case they are called to fight.

Ukraine’s parliament posted the video on its official Telegram page Sunday with a snippet of the song’s lyrics and the words. “The world needs to see it!” the message said. “It is impossible to hold back tears 💔

The Eurovision Song Contest is often political, as dozens of countries compete for points from national juries and audiences voting on their phones. In 2016, after Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula, Ukrainian singer Jamala won Eurovision with a song about the Soviet deportation of Crimean Tatars during World War II.

Russia was banned from competing in this year’s Eurovision contest over its invasion of Ukraine, and Ukrainian officials sought to portray their country’s win as a victory for the broader Ukrainian war effort.

“Our courage is impressing the world, our music is conquering Europe!” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky wrote on Instagram. Meanwhile, frontman Psiuk pleaded from the stage for help for Mariupol and the city’s Azovstal steel plant, where Ukrainian fighters are stranded amid Russian strikes.

Calling for next year’s Eurovision Song Contest — which Ukraine, as this year’s winner, traditionally gets to host — to be held in Mariupol, Zelensky said, “I am sure that our victorious chord in the battle against the enemy is not far away.”

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Exit mobile version