The Star Late Edition

Bigger and better Miss Bacheloret­te SA set to relocate

- MASHUDU SADIKE

IN A quest to broaden the horizon, and with the majority of hopefuls being based in Gauteng, the Miss Bacheloret­te SA beauty pageant is set to relocate from Limpopo to the country’s richest province as from next year, organisers said.

Speaking to the Pretoria News, chief executive Refilwe Mogale said it made sense to move the show because 80% of the entries received were from Gauteng.

“Some are originally from other provinces but they are based in Gauteng.

“We get a lot of enquiries from those who are based in Gauteng and want to participat­e but their biggest challenge is the fact that they have to travel to Limpopo in order to participat­e, therefore they end up not entering, which means we could be getting more entries than we currently are if we were based in Gauteng,” Mogale said.

“Some potential sponsors are interested in the project but their head offices are in Gauteng and regional offices don't have enough budgets to sponsor us.

“And they would normally say it doesn't make business sense for head office to invest in our project because it defeats the purpose of them having regional offices.”

Mogale added that families and friends of those participat­ing had a challenge attending the gala event in Polokwane because of what they had to spend on travel and accommodat­ion.

The businesswo­man said she was confident that the 2nd annual Miss Bacheloret­te SA pageant, scheduled for Polokwane next month, would be bigger and better because the “response we got in terms of entries was bigger than last year”.

“We have finalists representi­ng more provinces than we did last year (last year six provinces were represente­d, this year it’s eight).

“We have more stakeholde­rs such as designers who want to associate themselves with our project following last year’s success.

“We have a reigning Queen who has set an example of who an ideal Miss Bacheloret­te SA is, unlike last year when we did not have anyone handing over the baton.”

Mogale said that the pageant, held for the first time in 2019, was the first of its kind and was meant to empower women who are not married.

“I came up with this idea after asking myself why women would stay in abusive relationsh­ips?

“And most say because it’s the prospects of marriage.

“This pageant is meant to combat the level of women abuse that we are experienci­ng in South Africa and the stigmatisa­tion of women who are not married,” Mogale said.

She said that women who were not married were looked down upon and often not respected.

“Society gives pressure to women who are not married and so to have a pageant like this gives a chance to mature women gives them exposure.”

She said R100 000 would again be up for grabs on April 10 when the final event happens.

“Because this is our second year, we have better relationsh­ips with our sponsors and we are able to organise it better because we have learnt a lot from our previous one. It’s more interestin­g to host a pageant when you have a reigning queen,” Mogale said.

You have to be between the ages of 25 and 50, be female, not be married and be a South African citizen to enter the competitio­n.

One of the finalists, representi­ng Kimberly in the Northern Cape, Janine Nieklaasen, 33, said she was excited for an opportunit­y to enter a pageant that did not discrimina­te against women.

“Miss Bacheloret­te is the gap between Miss South Africa and Mrs South Africa,” Nieklaasen said.

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