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Detained chess champ plots next move against Putin

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  • Detained chess champ plots next move against Putin

    Agence France Presse -- English
    April 14, 2007 Saturday


    Detained chess champ plots next move against Putin

    by Sebastian Smith

    MOSCOW

    As chess champion Garry Kasparov was almost unbeatable, but from the
    Moscow police station where he was held Saturday the great tactician
    pondered a much tougher game -- how to bring down Russian President
    Vladimir Putin.

    Kasparov, who made mincemeat of his opponents for 15 years after he
    became World Chess Champion in 1985, is one of the disparate figures
    leading The Other Russia coalition that held a banned protest march
    Saturday in central Moscow.

    Some 200 people were detained, among them the former chess king, when
    they defied a police warning and attempted to march on the capital's
    Pushkin Square.

    Kasparov, a famously aggressive chess player, clearly thought the
    risk of arrest worthwhile -- particularly given the huge
    international media presence at the rally.

    "I'm not surprised, I think Kasparov wanted that, so now he's happy,"
    commented another opposition leader, Irina Khakamada.

    The same strategy of peaceful disobedience was used at two previous
    Other Russia marches in the former imperial capital Saint Petersburg
    and Nizhny Novgorod, east of Moscow, resulting in beatings and
    arrests. Moscow police were furious.

    Kasparov was arrested because "he came and began to provoke police
    into taking harsh action, while knowing that the demonstration on
    Pushkin Square was forbidden," a police spokesman was quoted as
    saying by Interfax.

    This intense man of 44, recognisable by his bushy eyebrows and dark
    features, makes an unlikely political leader in today's Russia.

    Half-Jewish, half-Armenian and born during the Soviet Union in
    Azerbaijan, he is automatically a hate figure for Russia's
    significant number of ultra-nationalists. And his fierce opposition
    to Putin is out of step with the vast majority shown by polls to
    admire the former KGB officer.

    But Kasparov's main talent seems to lie in coordinating Russia's
    fractured and marginalised opposition.

    The Other Russia, which he helped found, includes figures as
    disparate as a little-loved former premier Mikhail Kasyanov, the
    enigmatic writer and radical left leader Eduard Limonov, and a series
    of youth groups.

    Their stated goal is to ensure that the March 2008 presidential
    election, in which Putin is to be replaced, will be fair.

    "Our demands are simple," Kasparov said when he announced his
    retirement two years ago. "It's about putting pressure on Putin's
    regime to restore democratic institutions."

    Life on the political chessboard has been far from easy.

    After the brutal murder in Moscow of investigative journalist Anna
    Politikovskaya, a fierce Putin critic, in October Kasparov said he
    feared for his safety.

    "I try to protect myself and my family as much as possible but I am
    aware that no protection is possible," he said in an interview
    published in a Portuguese daily.

    During a 2005 tour to meet grass roots groups in the troubled North
    Caucasus region, Kasparov found his way repeatedly blocked.

    Planned venues for meetings were mysteriously closed ahead of his
    arrival and police stood by as youths hurled eggs and tomato sauce.

    Kasparov gives the impression of being angry, but he apparently
    retains a sense of humour.

    After being hit by a member of the public with a chess board, he
    quipped: "I'm glad that in the Soviet Union the popular sport was
    chess and not baseball."
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