Jakarta Globe – AFP, Feb 19, 2015
Rio de Janeiro. A Brazilian samba school shrugged off a controversy over alleged funding by an African strongman president and went on to claim its 13th win at the Rio Carnival championship on Wednesday.
Rio de Janeiro. A Brazilian samba school shrugged off a controversy over alleged funding by an African strongman president and went on to claim its 13th win at the Rio Carnival championship on Wednesday.
The
Beija-Flor school, whose name means hummingbird, has denied media reports it
was bankrolled to the tune of nearly $5 million by the president of Equatorial
Guinea, Teodoro Obiang Nguema.
Obiang
Nguema and his son are facing allegations of money laundering and corruption.
The leader holds an iron grip over tiny, oil-rich Equatorial Guinea and critics
have labeled him a ruthless dictator.
Hailing
from the Rio suburb of Nilopolis, Beija-Flor scored 259.9 points to land its
13th title and see off rivals Salgueiro by 0.4 points.
Known for its
creativity, the Beija-Flor team will now bring the final curtain down on this
year’s carnival festivities at Saturday’s Parade of Champions, comprising the
top six schools.
The Portela
school came third, and last year’s grand champions, Unidos da Tijuca, were in
fourth place.
The press
service for Beija-Flor, whose theme was a “strong, joyful and colorful” Africa,
told AFP they had merely received “cultural support and imported fabrics” from
Equatorial Guinea, which is located on the Atlantic coast in central Africa.
After
results were announced, Beija-Flor supporters burst into wild cheers at the
Sambadrome in downtown Rio, where Sunday and Monday night the top 12 samba
schools had battled it out for glory.
“I am very
emotional, very happy,” Rayssa Oliveira, one of Beija-Flor’s beauty queens,
told Globo television.
The jury
considered various aspects of each team’s performance in carefully
choreographed parades at the Sambadrome in front of crowds of some 72,000
people.
The jurors
award points in categories ranging from the highly decorative school floats,
the quality of their massed ranks of percussionists and how well the roughly
4,000-strong team move in sync with each other while singing their school song.
The record
of carnival celebrations dates back to 1723 – but the first samba school was
not formed until 1928.

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