Eurovision Song Contest 2005 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Country | Serbia and Montenegro | |||
National selection | ||||
Selection process | National final | |||
Selection date(s) |
Beovizija 19 February 2005 Montevizija 2 March 2005 Evropjesma 15 March 2005 |
|||
Selected entrant | No Name | |||
Selected song | "Zauvijek Moja" | |||
Finals performance | ||||
Final result | 7th, 137 points | |||
Serbia and Montenegro in the Eurovision Song Contest | ||||
|
Serbia and Montenegro were represented in the Eurovision Song Contest 2005 by Montenegrin group No Name with the song "Zauvijek Moja".
The national final was held in Podgorica on 4 March 2005. It featured 14 songs selected by Serbian broadcaster RTS in Beovizija 2005 festival and 10 songs that qualified from the Montenegrin semifinal "Montevizija 2005". "Zauvijek Moja" (Forever Mine) by the band No Name, a qualifier from Montenegro's semifinal, was the controversial winner of the event which was decided by a mixture of jury selection and televote. The Serbian favourite Jelena Tomašević with the song Jutro did not receive any points from the Montenegrin jury while No Name received a small amount of points from the Serbian jury. The probable partisan feeling that led to such a polarised outcome may be partly attributable to the fallout from an earlier heated dispute, initiated when the Serbian qualifiers had been actively promoted on the airwaves in the run-up to the final, in a breach of the rules agreed between the two sides, and one of the reason is probably last year's Evropesma, when all of the Montenegrin songs weren't awarded a single point by the Serbian jury. Before allowing "Zauvijek Moja" to be confirmed as Serbia and Montenegro's entry, the EBU launched an investigation into a number of formal complaints, which also related to hotly disputed allegations of plagiarism. However, after prolonged deliberations, the song was given the green light. The song won the award for the best composition in the contest. The song is written by Milan Perić and composed by Slaven Knezović.
The spokesperson who revealed Serbia and Montenegro's votes for other countries was RTCG journalist and presenter Nina Radulovic.