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By
Associated Press
Sunday,
March 16, 2008 - Updated 2d 22h
ago
KABUL,
Afghanistan - An Afghan woman who sang her way to the top three of Afghanistan’s
version of “American Idol” has been voted out.
Lima Sahar
was the first Afghan
woman to make it to the top three of the country’s popular “Afghan Star”
television show, which is now in its third year. Conservative critics had taken
aim at the 20-year-old woman for singing in public in the conservative Muslim
country.
Sahar, who comes from
Afghanistan’s most conservative tribe - the Pashtuns - thanked everyone who had
voted for her. She also reminded the audience that there had been very little
music in Afghanistan in the last two decades, which have been mostly consumed
with war.
Under the Taliban
regime that was overthrown in 2001, women were not even allowed out of their
homes unaccompanied, while music and television were
banned.
“I am very happy to
have come in third place,” Sahar said on the show broadcast Friday night. “This
is an honor for me that the people voted for me. I really thank them and I also
congratulate them.”
The country’s
conservative council of clerics has protested to President Hamid Karzai
over “Afghan Star” and Indian dramas shown on Tolo TV, the country’s most
popular station. But younger Afghans say the show is helping women
progress.
“Afghan Star” will
pick its winner between the two remaining contestants next
Friday.
The top three
finishers this season each represented one of Afghanistan’s major ethnic groups.
The two finalists are Hameed Sakhizada, a 21-year-old Hazara with a mop of black
hair, and Rafi Naabzada, a 19-year-old ethnic Tajik who often wears a white
leather jacket.
The show follows the
same format as “American Idol,” although the two are not connected. it has
become one of Afghanistan’s most popular TV shows, gathering large crowds around
TVs in restaurants and homes. About 2,000 hopefuls auditioned for the third
season of the show.
The singers perform in
front of a studio audience and three judges, and past winners have been given
recording deals. A woman finished fifth in the show’s first season, but no
female has risen as high as Sahar.
The winner this year
will take home around $5,000 - a king’s ransom in
Afghanistan.
Daud Sadiqi, the
show’s host, said “Afghan Star” has been a runaway hit that shows the world the
“peaceful face of Afghanistan.”
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