Miss International 2000
Miss International 2000, the 40th anniversary of the Miss International pageant, was held on October 4, 2000 at the Koseinenkin Hall in Tokyo, Japan. It was won by Vivian Urdaneta of Venezuela.[3][4]
| Miss International 2000 | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| Date | October 4, 2000[1] | 
| Presenters | Masumi Okada | 
| Venue | Koseinenkin Hall, Tokyo, Japan[1] | 
| Broadcaster | TV Tokyo | 
| Entrants | 56 | 
| Placements | 10[2] | 
| Withdrawals | Côte d'Ivoire, Dominican Republic, Britain, Latvia, Northern Mariana Islands, Uruguay | 
| Returns | Canada, Honduras, Puerto Rico, South Africa, Sweden, Tahiti, Taiwan, Thailand | 
| Winner | Vivian Urdaneta[1][3][4] | 
Results
    
    Placements
    
| Final results | Contestant | 
|---|---|
| Miss International 2000 | |
| 1st Runner-up | |
| 2nd Runner-up | 
  | 
| Semi-finalists | 
  | 
Contestants
    
 Argentina – Natalia Cecilia Dalla Costa
 Aruba – Carolina Fransisca Albertsz
 Bolivia – Catherine Villarroel Márquez
 Brazil – Maria Fernanda Schneider Schiavo
 Canada – Angeliki Lakouras
 Colombia – Carolina Cruz Osorio
 Croatia – Ana Gruica
 Curaçao – Roselle Angèle Augusta
 Cyprus – Nikoletta Violari
 Czech Republic – Markéta Svobodná
 Egypt – Hagar Ahmed El Taher
 Finland – Kati Hannele Nirkko
 France – Tatiana Micheline Bouguer
 Germany – Doreen Adler
 Greece – Dimitra Kitsiou
 Guam – Liza Marie Leolini Camacho
 Guatemala – Yazmin Alicia Di Maio Bocca
 Hawaii – Carly Makanani Ah Sing
 Honduras – Alba Marcela Rubí Castellón
 Hong Kong – Edith Ho Wai Wong
 Iceland – Anna Lilja Björnsdóttir
 India – Gayatri Anilkumar Joshi
 Israel – Dana Farkash
 Japan – Kanako Shibata
 Korea – Son Tae-young
 Lebanon – Sahar Mahmoud Al-Ghazzawi
 Macedonia – Sanja Nikolik
 Malaysia – Aida Stannis Kazum
 Malta – Dominique Desira
 Mexico – Leticia "Letty" Judith Murray Acedo
 Moldova – Elena Andrej Ungureanu
   Nepal – Uma Bogati
 Nicaragua – Marynés Argüello César
 Norway – Frida Agnethe Jonson
 Palau – Eloisa Dilbodel Senior
 Panama – Cristina Marie Sousa Broce
 Philippines – Joanna Maria Mijares Peñaloza
 Poland – Emilia Ewelina Raszynska
 Portugal – Tânia Isabel Campanacho Ferreira
 Puerto Rico – Rosiveliz Díaz Rodríguez
 Russia – Svetlana Victorovna Goreva
 San Marino – Chiara Valentini
 Singapore – Lorraine Mann Loo Koo
 Slovak Republic – Michaela Strählová
 South Africa – Irmari Steyl
 Spain – Raquel Rovira González
 Sweden – Gabrielle Elisabeth Heinerborg
 Tahiti – Hinarai Leboucher
 Taiwan – Chiang Hsin-Ting
 Thailand – Phongkajorn Sareeyawat
 Togo – Pamela Agnélé Gunn
 Tunisia – Ismahero Lahmar
 Turkey – Hulya Karanlik
 Ukraine – Yana Anatoliyivna Razumovska
 United States – Kirstin Anne Cook
 Venezuela – Vivian Urdaneta
Notes
    
    Did not compete
    
 United Kingdom – Nicola Jane Willoughby (World '99)
 Dominican Republic – Evanna Marting
 Latvia – Inga Alspire
 Paraguay – Maria Leticia Alvarez
 Peru – Claudia Neyra
 Trinidad & Tobago – Alana Selby
Replacements
    
 Nicaragua – Lissette Blandó (over the 23-age limit)
References
    
- "Miss Poland wins international beauty pageant". Japan Weekly Monitor. October 8, 2001. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
 - "Miss International 2000 update". Philippine Headline News. November 19, 2000. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
 - "Arte y Entretenimiento". El Universal (in Spanish). 21 February 2014. Retrieved 3 January 2016.
 - Vina, Nguyen (September 28, 2015). "All winners of the contest Miss International". Global Express News. Retrieved January 3, 2016.
 
External links
    
    
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
