Two-times Chess World Champion about to lose her titles over Women's Right stand

Chess champion to miss Saudi Arabia tournament over women's rights


Anna Muzychuk won’t defend her titles because she doesn’t want to be treated like a ‘secondary creature’


Two-time world chess champion Anna Muzychuk has said she will not attend a tournament held in Saudi Arabia because of the way the kingdom treats women as “secondary creatures’.

The landmark event and its record $2m (€1.7m) prize pot comes as crown prince Mohammed bin Salman looks to repackage his oil-rich nation as more welcoming – and moderate.
But the event has already been dogged by a refusal to give Israeli players visas and doubts whether Iranians and Qataris would come.

On Christmas Eve Muzychuk said she would not attend the tournament, citing the kingdom’s restrictions on the movement of women.
“I am going to lose two world champion titles - one by one,” she wrote on Facebook.
“Just because I decided not to go to Saudi Arabia. Not to play by someone’s rules, not to wear abaya, not to be accompanied getting outside and altogether not to feel myself a secondary creature,” she said.

“Exactly one year ago I won these two titles and was about the happiest person in the chess world but this time I feel really bad. I am ready to stand for my principles and skip the event, where in five days I was expected to earn more than I do in a dozen of events combined.
Her sister, also a chess player, will also miss the event.

The World Chess Federation’s governing body FIDE had claimed success when it got the authorities to loosen up their traditional demands for full-body abayas with a “historic” dress code: high-necked white blouses.
The King Salman Rapid and Blitz 2017 tournament opened on Monday, but just a day later Israel’s chess federation said it was seeking compensation from FIDE over the rejection.
The Israeli team was not the only one to find itself caught up in the broader chess game of Middle East politics.

Players from Iran and Qatar – both locked in their own regional rivalries with Riyadh – were also a major doubt.
As reports swirled that the Iranian and Qatari delegations were not granted visas, FIDE insisted they could show up – even if they chose not to in the end.

While the chess tournament might have been dented by the controversies, it has still drawn the game’s biggest names, including world number one Magnus Carlsen.
https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2...ss-saudi-arabia-tournament-over-womens-rights


Kudos to her, it takes courage to stand for yur principles even when it means your losing money, fame, opportunities to win...

Maybe next time the chess federation will think twice before organising a major tournament in such a country just because that country offers big money in exchange.
 
I always thought it strange that there is 'Women's Chess', as surely both sexes can compete together
I agree. But that is no the problem here. The problem is that the World Championships are held in a country where women are treated like second class human beings
 

bobjustbob

Proud member of FreeOnes Hall Of Fame. Retired to
Woman's chess? Um ...no. Women can play in poker and have won many of tournaments. Chess is no different. Chess and poker are not physical. It's mental.
 

meesterperfect

Hiliary 2020
Hey weren't the 911 hijackers from Saudi Arabia?
Hey didn't we not attack and destroy Saudi Arabia after 9/11 but instead Iraq, Afghanistan and many other countries in the Middle East and Africa instead and in turn hand them over to "our enemy" Al-qauaeaueada with the exception of Opium Central Afghanistan?
Hey don't we "sell" Saudi Arabia billions of dollars in bullets weapons and bombs every year? BTW where's my share of that money? Oh well at least its going towards funding education. What?

Anyway, now she knows how Francine felt.

 
What she should have done is tell them she'll participate, but if she wins, she gets to take on the winner of the men's division. If she won that, it would have made a much more significant statement than just saying "I'm not gonna play"
 

bobjustbob

Proud member of FreeOnes Hall Of Fame. Retired to
What she should have done is tell them she'll participate, but if she wins, she gets to take on the winner of the men's division. If she won that, it would have made a much more significant statement than just saying "I'm not gonna play"

I know where you going at here. Billie Jean King vs Bobby Riggs kind of thing. That has been done before and the men vs women came up men over the span of that trend. Differences was those were physical challenges. The professional poker circuit does not have many female participants. Not because of bias at all. Anyone that has the money to sit at the table may play. I don't track female vs male participants with percentages and I wont guess but they do win.

Dave Little handicaps for The NY Daily News. His wife Debbie does the same for The NY Post. Very good acquaintances for 20 years. Just as equal picking the ponies. Women are VERY respected in the horse racing world. Chess? Is that on ESPM 29?
 
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