By KIRIT RADIA
MOSCOW June 6, 2013

Russian chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov has fled his country because he says he fears political persecution if he stays.

“I kept traveling back and forth until late February, where it became clear that I might be part of this ongoing investigation of the activities of the political protesters,” Kasparov told a press conference at the United Nations in Geneva on Monday, where he was receiving an award.

“Right now I have serious doubts that if I return to Moscow I may be able to travel back. So for the time being I refrain from returning to Russia,” he said.

Kasparov’s departures is just the latest in a string of prominent Russian who have left the country because they fear prosecution. In a statement posted later on his website, Kasparov insisted he had not emigrated permanently from Russia.

“Russia is and will always be my country,” he wrote, adding that he would continue his democracy advocacy from abroad.

Kasparov was ranked the number one chess player in the world for a record 20 years, but retired from professional chess in 2005. In recent years Kasparov, who famously defeated IBM’s Deep Blue supercomputer in a series of chess matches in 1996, had become a strident opponent of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s government. He co-founded a pro-democracy party and has been a prominent speaker at anti-Putin rallies that have been held over the past year and a half. 

More here.

Chess Daily News from Susan Polgar
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