Top Russian chess player Karjakin suspended over Ukraine remarks

Russian chess player Sergey Karjakin plays chess during the 79th edition of the Tata Steel Chess Tournament at the Moriaan sport hall in Wijk aan Zee, on January 15, 2017. - The tournament will take place from 13 to 29 January.

FILE–Russian chess player Sergey Karjakin.  (Photo by Koen Suyk / ANP / AFP) 

Leading Russian chess grandmaster Sergey Karjakin has been suspended from playing for six months for publicly supporting Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the game’s world governing body FIDE announced Monday.

The organization’s ethics committee found that Karjakin, who in 2016 challenged world champion Magnus Carlsen for the title, had brought the game into disrepute with his comments on social media.

The 32-year-old player is an outspoken supporter of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

His statements “on the ongoing military conflict in Ukraine has led to a considerable number of reactions on social media and elsewhere,” most of the rejecting Karjakin’s views, said FIDE.

Karjakin had published a letter backing Russia’s intervention, saying he hoped it would achieve the “demilitarization and denazification of Ukraine” echoing the position taken by Moscow, the ruling noted.

Karjakin also tweeted pictures of what he said were Ukrainian soldiers holding a photo of Adolph Hitler, commenting: “This is Ukraine,” the ruling added.

Karjakin is currently ranked 18th in the world. But the ban means he will not be able to take his place as one of the eight players at the Madrid candidates tournament in June to compete for the right to challenge Carlsen for the title.

On Monday, Karjakin denounced what he said was FIDE’s “shameful” ruling, posting from his Telegram account.

“I regret nothing,” he wrote, saying he was first and foremost a patriot and a chess player second.

Russia’s chess federation has already said it will appeal the ruling, denouncing what it said was “discrimination”.

Last Wednesday, FIDE suspended the Russian and Belarusian national teams from chess tournaments, while allowing individual players from those countries to continue to compete.

Monday’s ruling cleared another Russia player, Sergei Shipov, of similar charges, saying his comments had been less provocative than those of Karjakin, and that he was not as well known and so had far less of an audience.

RELATED STORIES

Read more...