Saturday, 1 March 2025

Former World Chess Champion Boris Spassky Passes Away


Boris Spassky, Chess Champion Who Lost ‘Match of the Century,’ Dies at 88

Mr. Spassky, a Russian, played Bobby Fischer, an American, in Iceland at the height of the Cold War.

A black-and-white photo of Boris Spassky at a chessboard, wearing a short-sleeved shirt and resting his left cheek on his left hand.
Boris Spassky in 1973, a year after he lost to Bobby Fischer

Boris Spassky, the world chess champion whose career was overshadowed by his loss to Bobby Fischer in the “Match of the Century” in 1972, died on Thursday in Moscow. He was 88.

His death was announced by the International Chess Federation, the game’s governing body.

Arkady Dvorkovich, the president of the federation, said in a statement: “He was not only one of the greatest players of the era and the world, but also a true gentleman. His contributions to chess will never be forgotten.”

In a 2023 interview for an exhibition at the World Chess Hall of Fame in St. Louis, his son, Boris Jr., said: “The role that he played in the 1972 match, he always thought of it as a chess player, because all the fuss around it, political, geostrategic, he never mentioned it. I am pretty certain that he felt the pressure.”

When they played their first match, in Reykjavik, Iceland, Mr. Fischer was widely portrayed as taking on the might of the Soviet chess machine, with Mr. Spassky representing the repressive Soviet empire.

The reality could not have been further from the truth. Mr. Spassky, at 35, was urbane, laid back and good-natured, acceding to Mr. Fischer’s many demands leading up to and during the match.

A black-and-white photo of Mr. Spassky, wearing a tweed coat and looking upset, walking away from a crowd of reporters and other people in front of a building.
Mr. Spassky left the Reykjavik Chess Hall after Mr. Fischer failed to appear for the second game of the world chess championship in 1972. 
The match was a best-of-24 series, with each win counting as one point, each draw as a half point and each loss as zero. The first player to 12.5 points would be the winner.

In Game 1, on July 11, Mr. Fischer blundered and lost. Afterward, he refused to play Game 2 unless the television cameras recording the match were turned off. When they were not, Mr. Fischer forfeited the game.

The match seemed in doubt, but a compromise was worked out to move the match to a tiny, closed playing area behind the main hall.

Mr. Fischer won Game 3, his first victory ever against Mr. Spassky, and proceeded to steamroll him, winning the match 12.5 to 8.5.

The two men face each other at a desk, seated in office chairs. Mr. Fischer has his left elbow on the surface and his left hand over his face; Mr. Spassky has his arms folded.
Mr. Fischer, right, and Mr. Spassky played the last game of the “Match of the Century” on Aug. 31, 1972.Credit...

Mr. Spassky’s sportsmanship was on full display in Game 6 of the match, which by then had been moved back into the main hall. When Mr. Fischer won the game, taking the lead for the first time in the match, Mr. Spassky joined with the spectators in standing and applauding his victory.

After losing the match, Mr. Spassky received a chilly reception on his return to the Soviet Union. He bounced back to win the Soviet Championship in 1973 and reached the semifinals of the qualifying matches for the world championship in 1974, losing to Anatoly Karpov, the future world champion.

Still, things were not the same. For two years, he was banned from traveling abroad, the life blood of a professional chess player in the Soviet Union, and his financial support and perks were cut. He found a way out, however.

In 1975, he met Marina Stcherbatcheff, a secretary working at the French Embassy in Moscow, who became his third wife. They moved to France, and he became a French citizen in 1978.


The pressure that Mr. Spassky felt to defend the Soviet hegemony over chess was immense. Years later, he was reported to have said of the 1972 match: “I was happy to lose the championship. My years as champion were the worst years of my life.”


Boris Vasiliyevich Spassky was born in Leningrad (later St. Petersburg) on Jan. 30, 1937. He was the second child of Russian parents; his parents later divorced, and his father left the family.


He grew up extremely poor, and when he was 5, during the siege of Leningrad, he was temporarily placed in an orphanage to escape the war. It was there, according to his son, that he learned to play chess.

He began studying chess in earnest in 1947 when he joined the Palace of Pioneers, a state-sponsored club that developed the talents of promising children, and his talent was immediately noticed and nurtured. By the time he was 11, he was receiving a stipend for chess, which became the family’s primary source of income.


In 1955, he won the World Junior Championship and placed third in the Soviet Championship, becoming a grandmaster at 18, the youngest in history. That record was eclipsed three years later when Mr. Fischer became a grandmaster at 15.

From 1951 to 1961, Mr. Spassky trained with Alexander Kazimirovich Tolush, a well-known master of the attack, and he had a number of successes. But he grew disenchanted with his results and switched to Igor Zakharovich Bondarevsky, who had a more strategic approach. Mr. Spassky’s play began to improve, and he began his ascent to the world title.

At his height as a player, from the early 1960s to the early ’70s, Mr. Spassky won by playing in whatever manner the position demanded. When opportunities presented themselves, he could attack viciously, as in his brilliant performance against David Bronstein in 1960, a game used as the basis for the chess scene in the 1963 James Bond movie “From Russia With Love.” He could also, with great patience, deftly outmaneuver his opponents, as he did in his Game 21 victory in the world championship match against Tigran Petrosian in 1966.

Mr. Spassky lost the match against Mr. Petrosian, but he qualified to play for the world title again in 1969, and this time he beat him. After his loss to Mr. Karpov in 1974, Mr. Spassky qualified for three more world championship cycles but was knocked out each time.

He remained a Top 10 player into the mid-1980s, but his results began to slip.

By 1992, Mr. Spassky was living on the margins of the chess world. Then the owner of a bank in Belgrade, where Mr. Fischer was living, offered $5 million for a return match with Mr. Fischer. The condition was that the match would be played in Serbia and Montenegro, the former Yugoslavia, which were under United Nations sanctions for waging a brutal war against Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina.

The match violated the sanctions, but Mr. Spassky enthusiastically agreed to play. “He pulls me out of oblivion,” he said of Mr. Fischer. “He makes me fight. It’s a miracle and I am grateful.”

The match received worldwide attention and lasted 30 games, but the result was no different from the one 20 years earlier: Mr. Fischer won, 10 games to 5, with draws not counting.

The matches differed, however, in two respects: The quality of play had suffered a sharp decline, and the tension between the two players was gone. Mr. Spassky and Mr. Fischer, bound together by being at the center of so much scrutiny for so long, were old friends, laughing and talking before and after the games.

Mr. Spassky’s warm feelings for Mr. Fischer were genuine, as he showed in 2004, when Mr. Fischer was arrested in Japan for not having a valid passport and was threatened with deportation to the United States to face charges for violating the sanctions against Yugoslavia.

Before Mr. Fischer was ultimately released and sent to Iceland, Mr. Spassky sent a letter to President George W. Bush, asking for clemency.

“Bobby and myself committed the same crime,” he wrote. “Put sanctions against me also. Arrest me. And put me in the same cell with Bobby Fischer. And give us a chess set.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/27/world/europe/boris-spassky-dead.html


Friday, 28 February 2025

Tunisian Terrorist Jailed for Life in France


Islamic terrorist, 25, who took a selfie moments before he killed three worshippers in a deadly rampage at a French cathedral is jailed for life


An Islamic terrorist who took a selfie before murdering three worshippers in a cathedral in the south of France will spend the rest of his life behind bars. 

Brahim Aouissaoui, 25, was found guilty on Wednesday of using a knife to carry out the horrific killings in Nice on October 29, 2020.

The Tunisian national had arrived in Europe just three weeks earlier as an illegal migrant. 

And chillingly, Aouissaoui sent a selfie to friends back in Tunisia to show off the new clothes he had bought with money working illegally in Europe.

The image was taken at a shop in France the day before he walked into the church in the centre of Nice armed with two knives and intent on murder. 

One of Aouissaoui's victims, Nadine Devillers, was a 60-year-old woman who was 'almost decapitated,' according to prosecutors.

During a trial in the Riviera city, Aouissaoui said he had carried out the attacks in revenge for 'the West killing innocent Muslims', but he could not remember exactly what happened.

His other victims were Simone Barreto Silva, a 44-year-old Franco-Brazilian mother, and Vincent Loques, 55, a father of two daughters.

Brahim Aouissaoui, 25, took this image at a shop in France the day before he walked into the church in the centre of Nice armed with two knives and intent on murder

Brahim Aouissaoui, 25, took this image at a shop in France the day before he walked into the church in the centre of Nice armed with two knives and intent on murder

Nice terror attack victim Nadine Devillers, 60, was 'almost decapitated'

Nice terror attack victim Nadine Devillers, 60, was 'almost decapitated'

A woman cries as she speaks to reporters in front of the Notre Dame church in Nice

A woman cries as she speaks to reporters in front of the Notre Dame church in Nice

The killer is pictured wearing a white t-shirt claiming to 'love life' outside his family's humble home near Sfax

The killer is pictured wearing a white t-shirt claiming to 'love life' outside his family's humble home near Sfax

All were stabbed repeatedly by Aouissaoui with a kitchen knife.

The 25-year-old was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole on Wednesday - the most severe punishment possible under French law.

It normally means a minimum of 30 years in a cell, usually in solitary confinement.

A professional jury made up of magistrates convicted Aouissaoui after prosecutors said he was 'consumed by Jihadi ideology'.

Speaking of the selfie Aoussaoui took before the attack, his brother Yassin, 38, said: 'He bought new clothes and a mobile phone in France with the money he had earned working harvesting olives in Italy.

'He was very proud of his new clothes and wanted to show us he was doing well.

'Brahim said he wanted to go to Europe to earn money to buy a car.'

He added: 'He made a lot of phone calls the night before the attack. He called us, the family and his friends. 

'He spent hours on the phone reassuring us that everything was fine. He said he had met an Arab man who was helping him to get on his feet in France.'

Aouissaoui was shot repeatedly by police after the attack, but survived, and has been held in custody since.

He had arrived in Italy on an illegal route from Tunisia, and then travelled to France overland.

He entered the Basilica of Notre-Dame of the Assumption, in the centre of Nice, carrying a copy of the Koran, three knives and two mobile phones, according to prosecutors.

Simone Barreto Silva, a 44-year-old Brazil-born mother of three was one of the victims the attack on a church in Nice

Simone Barreto Silva, a 44-year-old Brazil-born mother of three was one of the victims of the attack on a church in Nice 

VICTIM: Brazilian-born Simone Barreto Silva, 44, also succumbed to her injuries after seeking refuge in a nearby burger bar. Her last words were to paramedics, who she told: 'Tell my children that I love them'

VICTIM: Brazilian-born Simone Barreto Silva, 44, succumbed to her injuries after seeking refuge in a nearby burger bar. Her last words were to paramedics, who she told: 'Tell my children that I love them'

Simone Barreto Silva, a 44-year-old Brazil-born mother of three, was one of the victims of an attack on a church in Nice on October 29

Simone Barreto Silva, a 44-year-old Brazil-born mother of three, was one of the victims of the attack on a church in Nice

Brahim's father Mohamed and his brother Yassine pictured outside the family home

Brahim's father Mohamed and his brother Yassine pictured outside the family home

Vincent Loques, 54, a sacristan of the Notre Dame basilica in the city of Nice, was brutally killed as he prepared for the first Mass of the day

Vincent Loques, 54, a sacristan of the Notre Dame basilica in the city of Nice, was brutally killed as he prepared for the first Mass of the day 

Married Nadine Devillers, 60, was the first person attacked by Aoussaoui. He slit her throat near the baptismal font.

Next, he hacked 54-year-old sacristan Vincent Loques to death as he prepared for the first Mass of the day.

Brazilian-born Simone Barreto Silva, 44, was then stabbed multiple times but managed to escape the church, running to a nearby burger bar where she succumbed to her injuries. 

The mother-of-three's last words to paramedics were: 'Tell my children that I love them'.  

Aouissaoui, who had worked as motorcycle mechanic in the Tunisian city of Sfax, was a heavy drinker, and regular cannabis smoker.

The last sentence of this type was given to Salah Abdeslam, another Islamist terrorist, who was involved in the November 2015 attacks on Paris, in which 130 people were murdered.

Earlier in 2015, two Paris-born gunmen linked to Al-Qaeda broke into the offices of the Charlie Hebdo satirical magazine, leaving 17 people dead inside and three outside.

In July 2016, 86 people were killed and more than 400 injured when a 19-ton truck was deliberately driven into crowds on the seafront promenade at Nice.

During the same month, two Isis terrorists murdered an 86-year-old Catholic priest during a church service in Normandy.

And, in October 2020, three people were stabbed to death by a Tunisian immigrant in the Notre Dame basilica in Nice.

Terrorists have also targeted teachers, such as Samuel Paty, who was decapitated in the greater Paris suburb of Conflans-Sainte-Honorine in 2020.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14440735/Islamic-terrorist-selfie-killed-three-worshippers-jailed.html

His mother Gamra, 61, revealed: 'Brahim did start praying and taking his religion more seriously a few months ago but he was not in contact with Salafists [Islamic extremists]

His mother Gamra, 61

KILLER'S MOTHER: Kmar (right), the mother of Nice attacker Brahim Aouissaoui who killed three people in Thursday's terror attack, cries at her home in Tunisia last night after being questioned by counter-terrorism police

KILLER'S MOTHER: the mother of Nice attacker Brahim Aouissaoui who killed three people in the terror attack, cries at her home in Tunisia after being questioned by counter-terrorism police 

Brahim's brother Yassine shows the picture he has of his brother

Brahim's brother Yassine shows the picture he has of his brother

Brahim's brother Yassine. His brother Yassin, 38, said: 'He bought new clothes and a mobile phone in France with the money he had earned working harvesting olives in Italy'

Brahim's brother Yassine. His brother Yassin, 38, said: 'He bought new clothes and a mobile phone in France with the money he had earned working harvesting olives in Italy'

Brahim's father Mohamed and his brother Yassine pictured outside the family home

Brahim's father Mohamed and his brother Yassine pictured outside the family home

Brahim Aoussaoui, a 21-year-old Tunisian migrant, receives medical treatment after killing three worshippers

Brahim Aoussaoui, the 21-year-old Tunisian migrant, receives medical treatment after killing three worshippers

In a little over six weeks, Aoussaoui travelled from Tunisia, into Italy via Lampedusa, was taken to the mainland, and released by Italian authorities under deportation order. From there, it is thought he caught a train to Paris, where he stayed for a little over two weeks, before going to Nice and launching his attack

In a little over six weeks, Aoussaoui travelled from Tunisia, into Italy via Lampedusa, was taken to the mainland, and released by Italian authorities under deportation order. From there, he caught a train to Paris, where he stayed for a little over two weeks, before going to Nice and launching his attack

Nice terrorist Brahim Aoussaoui is seen in a photograph taken at the Italian port city of Bari, where he disembarked from a coronavirus quarantine ship on October 8 - marking his arrival in mainland Europe

Nice terrorist Brahim Aoussaoui is seen in a photograph taken at the Italian port city of Bari, where he disembarked from a coronavirus quarantine ship on October 8 - marking his arrival in mainland Europe

Another image of Aouissaoui is held by his mother in the Tunisian province of Sfax, where she revealed that she had begged her son not to travel to France

Another image of Aouissaoui is held by his mother in the Tunisian province of Sfax, where she revealed that she had begged her son not to travel to France

Malaysia's former prime minister said that Muslims have a right 'to kill millions of French people', shortly after a knife-wielding Islamist killed three people in a deadly terror attack in Nice. 

Mahathir, who served as Malaysian premier twice for a total of 24 years, said that French President Emmanuel Macron was 'very primitive' and 'not showing that he is civilised'.  

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan expressed outrage at Macron, suggesting that he is mentally ill.

Muslim demonstrators shout slogans as they tear a poster of French President Emmanuel Macron during a protest calling for the boycott of French products in Hyderabad, India

Muslim demonstrators shout slogans as they tear a poster of French President Emmanuel Macron during a protest and call for the boycott of French products

Muslims take part in a protest after Friday prayer, calling for the boycott of French products in Dhaka, Bangladesh

Muslims take part in a protest calling for the boycott of French products in Dhaka, Bangladesh

Muslims shout slogans against French President Emmanuel Macron during a protest in Hyderabad, India

Muslims shout slogans against French President Emmanuel Macron

Muslims chant slogans after Friday prayer as they take part in a protest calling for the boycott of French products in Dhaka

Muslims chant slogans as they take part in a protest calling for the boycott of French products in Dhaka

An effigy depicting the French president Emmanuel Macron is seen as Muslims chant slogans denouncing him during a protest in Dhaka, Bangladesh

An effigy depicting the French president Emmanuel Macron is seen as Muslims chant slogans denouncing him during a protest in Dhaka, Bangladesh

Muslims burn an effigy depicting French President Emmanuel Macron as they take part in a protest calling for the boycott of French products in Bangladesh

Muslims burn an effigy depicting French President Emmanuel Macron as they take part in a protest calling for the boycott of French products in Bangladesh

Muslims hold pictures of the French president Emmanuel Macron after Friday prayer in Dhaka, Bangladesh

Muslims hold pictures of the French president Emmanuel Macron in Dhaka, Bangladesh