Iris Mittenaere beat 85 other hopefuls in the finale in the
Philippines in the 65th edition of the three-hour show that
focused on diversity and empowering women to overcome the
struggles of life.
"I was very surprised I won, I feel blessed," said the
24-year-old, whose competition profile had described her goal as
advocating for dental and oral hygiene if she won.
Having clinched the crown, Mittenaere said she wanted to go
beyond that and promote education for children and young women.
"Miss Universe was a dream, every girl wants to be Miss Universe
... the stage is amazing, everything is amazing," she said,
beaming throughout her victory news conference.
"I want to help people, I want to understand people, I want to
meet people, that's why this is a dream for me."
Haiti's Raquel Pelissier was the first runner-up, while Andrea
Tovar of Colombia placed second runner-up.
Thirteen contestants were picked for the swimsuit round of the
finals after a preliminary competition last week, before being
reduced to nine for the evening gown segment.
The contenders were then trimmed to six, including Thailand's
Chalita Suansane, Mary Esther Were of Kenya and local hopeful
Maxene Medina, who overcame a torrent of domestic criticism of
her public-speaking skills.
Medina had a hard act to follow in the run-up to the
competition, with the wildly popular Filipina Pia Wurtzbach the
reigning champion, and hogging much of media attention.
Wurtzbach said she was happy with the result and congratulated
Medina.
Steve Harvey returned as show host after a gaffe in the 2015
competition, when he mistakenly announced the wrong winner.
Canada's Sierra Bearchell, a 23-year-old law student and
entrepreneur, also won a Top 13 spot despite getting some tough
comments from fans about her weight, and how she was bigger than
her rivals.
"This competition is more than what we look like. It's about
being comfortable with who we are," she was quoted as saying in
a media interview.
It was the third time for the Philippines to host the pageant,
and its major local sponsor, tycoon Luis Singson, paid $13
million in a one-off deal to bring the contest to the country.
(Editing by Martin Petty, Robert Birsel)
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