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regular-article-logo Tuesday, 05 November 2024

Russia-Ukraine War Impact: India to bid for Chess Olympiad

The International Chess Federation decided to move the event and all other official competitions planned in Russia

The Telegraph Published 27.02.22, 02:17 AM
Representational image.

Representational image. File picture

The All India Chess Federation (AICF) on Saturday said it will be bidding to host the 44th Chess Olympiad later this year after the prestigious event was moved out of Russia following its invasion of Ukraine.

The Chess Olympiad is a biennial event in which teams from some 190 countries compete over a two-week period. The 2022 edition was supposed to take place in Moscow from July 26 to August 8.

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“Yeah, we are bidding for the Chess Olympiad this year. The budget for the event would be $10 million (about Rs 75 crore),” AICF secretary Bharat Singh Chauhan said.

If India gets the nod to host the Olympiad, it would be the second major world chess event to be held in the country after the World Championship match in 2013 between Viswanathan Anand and Magnus Carlsen, the current world No.1.

On Friday, FIDE (the International Chess Federation) decided to move the Chess Olympiad and all other official competitions planned in Russia. The other events that were moved away from Russia are the first chess Olympiad for people with disabilities and the 93rd FIDE Congress.

FIDE is said to be already working on finding alternative dates and locations for these events.

“...the rapidly deteriorating geopolitical situation has forced the FIDE Council to make this difficult move. During its extraordinary meeting… it was decided that all official competitions planned would be moved from Russia,” FIDE stated on Friday.

FIDE's current president is Arkady Dvorkovich, a Russian. Dvorkovich held high positions in the Russian government between 2008 and 2018. The Ukrainian Chess Federation (UCF) has appealed to FIDE to ban on all Russian chess players.

Written with agency inputs

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