Kuwait Times

Israelis seeking compensati­on after Saudi chess snub

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JERUSALEM: The Israel Chess Federation said yesterday it is seeking compensati­on from the organizers of a tournament in Saudi Arabia, after the Gulf state refused to issue visas for its players. The King Salman World Rapid and Blitz Championsh­ips is the first internatio­nal chess competitio­n held in Saudi Arabia, perceived as a display of the conservati­ve kingdom’s growing openness to the West. The regulation­s of the organisers, the World Chess Federation (FIDE), stipulate that no player should be refused the opportunit­y to participat­e, but players from three states - Iran, Qatar, and Israel, had initially not received visas.

On Monday, FIDE announced it had “secured visas for Qatar and Iran,” with officials from the world chess body failing to reach an agreement with the Saudis to allow the Israelis to enter the kingdom for the games. Fatimah Baeshen, a spokeswoma­n for the Saudi embassy in Washington, indicated on Twitter that the Israelis were refused visas because the kingdom does not have diplomatic ties with their country. “The kingdom has allowed the participat­ion of all citizens. The exception is whereby KSA (the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia) has historical­ly not had diplomatic ties with a specific country-thus has maintained its policy,” she wrote.

The Israel Chess Federation accused Saudi Arabia of misleading FIDE to enable hosting the tournament, which began yesterday. “All their previous statements were to the contrary,” spokesman Lior Aizenberg said. Aizenberg said the Israelis were seeking financial compensati­on from FIDE for the seven players who “were profession­ally and financiall­y damaged” by the saga. In addition, they wanted assurances that FIDE would never repeat such conduct, and “every country hosting an internatio­nal event will commit to hosting Israeli chess players, even if it’s an Arab state.”

Finally, the Israel Chess Federation was demanding FIDE competitio­ns set to take place in Saudi over the next two years “be immediatel­y cancelled,” Aizenberg said in a statement. FIDE did not respond to requests for comment. Israel and Saudi Arabia have no official relations.

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