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Armenia Says It Won't Take Part In Chess Olympiad In Baku

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  • Armenia Says It Won't Take Part In Chess Olympiad In Baku

    ARMENIA SAYS IT WON'T TAKE PART IN CHESS OLYMPIAD IN BAKU
    By Suren Musayelyan

    ArmeniaNow Deputy Editor
    10.09.12 | 12:50

    Armenia repeated over the weekend its decision not to send its
    chess players to Baku after the Azerbaijan capital was chosen by
    international chess's governing body, FIDE, to hold one of the
    upcoming Olympiads.

    On Saturday, the day before Armenia won the World Chess Olympiad in
    Istanbul, Turkey, the city also hosted an FIDE congress where it was
    decided to grant Baku the right to host the 2016 Olympiad. Before
    that the FIDE Executive Committee demanded that Azerbaijan provide
    security guarantees to delegations of all countries, including Armenia,
    which it eventually received at the ministerial level.

    Azerbaijan's Sport Minister Azad Rahimov assured the chess body that
    the security of the Armenian chess players would be guaranteed on
    the state level.

    "If necessary, the Armenian chess players will be provided with
    special security," the official said, according to Azerbaijani media.

    Armenia still deems the assurances are too little, as things stand now,
    to risk the security of its nationals in Azerbaijani soil.

    The tense relations between the two neighboring South Caucasus nations
    aggravated earlier this month after a controversial extradition of a
    convicted murderer of an Armenian to Azerbaijan by Hungary. Armenia
    believes the move is more proof of the bitter hatred that exists in
    Azerbaijan towards Armenians after ethnic clashes in the late 1980s
    and the bloody war over Nagorno-Karabakh in 1991-1994.

    FIDE President Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, meanwhile, said the conflict
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan could be settled by 2016 and so it
    shouldn't stand in the way of Baku's bid.

    "In 1996 we organized an Olympiad in Yerevan. Why not organize it in
    Baku in 2016?" said the FIDE chief, adding that he had visited both
    Armenia and Azerbaijan to discuss the matter with both countries'
    presidents.

    "This Olympiad will be in four years' time and during this time the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict may be settled. So, let's play chess!"

    added Ilyumzhinov.

    Meanwhile, former world champion Garry Kasparov, a half-Armenian and
    native of Baku, too, said he might visit Baku during the 2016 event
    if the Karabakh conflict had been solved by that time. But the citizen
    of Russia excluded his attendance of the Baku Olympiad otherwise.

    "Maybe the parties will settle the issue till 2016. In that case I
    will think it over," he told Azerisport.com in Istanbul.

    Kasparov is expected to make a bid to become FIDE president in
    elections scheduled for 2014.

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