Sunday Star-Times

Police quiz star dancer on Bolshoi acid attack

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A STAR dancer at the Bolshoi has been questioned by police over a brutal acid attack that left the theatre’s ballet director struggling to regain his sight.

Police said they questioned Nikolai Tsiskaridz­e, a principal dancer, as a witness in the assault on Sergei Filin on Thursday.

‘‘Employees of the Bolshoi Theatre, relatives and acquaintan­ces of Filin, have also been questioned,’’ police said in a statement carried by Russian news agencies.

A masked assailant threw sulphuric acid in Filin’s face last week in a late-night attack that has shocked the country. Filin, as well as the leadership of the Bolshoi, have repeatedly insisted the attack was linked to his work as the artistic director of the Bolshoi ballet.

The horrific attack has exposed the poisonous atmosphere inside Russia’s most famous theatre.

Tsiskaridz­e said he had no connection to the attack. ‘‘It’s a tragedy,’’ he said. ‘‘It’s a horror.’’

Tsiskaridz­e, 39, was a contender for ballet director in 2011, but lost out to Filin, 42. The previous director stepped down after a suspected rival posted online photograph­s of him in bed with other men.

Tsiskaridz­e is a well-known figure in Russia beyond the world of ballet, having appeared as a judge on reality television shows.

He has also become the loudest critic of a wildly over-budget and delayed reconstruc­tion that he likened to ‘‘vandalism’’.

The Bolshoi

reopened

in

October 2011 looking, karidze, ‘‘like hotel’’.

He said the theatre’s leadership, headed by general director Anatoly Iksanov, had turned against him following his criticism. Early last year, they tried to fire him but failed. Now, he claimed, the theatre’s administra­tion was trying to force other dancers to sign a letter demanding he be fired as a teacher at the theatre.

‘‘The methods of 1937 are back,’’ he said, referring to the height of Stalin-era purges.

Attempt to blame him for the attack on Filin has been made because ‘‘it was useful’’ for some ‘‘ bad people’’, Tsiskaridz­e said, declining to elaborate further.

Filin was attacked outside his home on January 17, after weeks of receiving threatenin­g phone calls. He has since said he regretted not taking on a bodyguard, or publicisin­g the threats against him. The acid attack left him with third-degree burns to the face and neck.

He has undergone a reconstruc­tive operation to repair the damage to his face, as well as two operations to restore his eyesight. He can now see from his left eye and doctors will decide next week whether another operation is needed to restore his right eye.

Although long plagued with vicious rivalries and rumours, competitio­n inside the Bolshoi has never reached the level of brute violence.

Tsiskaridz­e said life inside the theatre was returning to normal. ‘‘We are working and we will keep working,’’ he said. ‘‘Everyone is tired of talking about it.’’ said Tsisa Turkish

 ?? Photo: Reuters ?? Rare visitor: A man reaches down to pat a dolphin as it struggles along a bulkhead in the headwaters of the Gowanus Canal as others look on in Brooklyn, New York.
Photo: Reuters Rare visitor: A man reaches down to pat a dolphin as it struggles along a bulkhead in the headwaters of the Gowanus Canal as others look on in Brooklyn, New York.
 ??  ?? SERGEI FILIN
SERGEI FILIN
 ??  ?? NIKOLAI TSISKARIDZ­E
NIKOLAI TSISKARIDZ­E

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