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Open letter to All participants of the FIDE Congress in
Bled/Slovenia
29th October 2002
Unification of the Chess World
Ladies and Gentlemen,
In view of the forthcoming FIDE Congress I would like to
express my concern regarding the proposed unification of the chess world.
Until now vital principles of the Prague Agreement of 6 May
2002 signed, among oth-ers, by FIDE President H.E. Kirsan Iljunshinov,
myself and leading Grandmasters have not been honoured.
Neither the steps necessary for setting up a professional
management organisation, nor the proposed and agreed business plan have been
implemented. FIDE have not issued a license to any such management
organisation. In addition, the system and structures of future world
championship cycles after a possible unification match are by no means clear.
The agreement to found a democratically elected Committee of Grandmasters has
not been observed.
A further, essential point is the unity plan (Annex A) of
the Prague Agreement. Accord-ing to this a united Classical World Chess
Champion is to be determined within a period of 18 months. Taking into account
the above circumstances the likelihood of achieving this target is open to
doubt.
The fact that the FIDE administration (FIDE Rating Office)
omitted me in the current world ranking list of top players (October 2002) does
not contribute towards creating a positive and trusting atmosphere. Despite
repeated requests by my management you have contravened your own rules (FIDE
Handbook) and practice by not considering my matches against Grandmaster Garry
Kasparov (Botvinnik Memorial 12/2001).
I sincerely hope that FIDE will decide on clear and speedy
measures at Bled so that, on the one hand, the obligations resulting from the
Prague Agreement are honoured and that, on the other, the unification process
desired by the chess world may not be jeopardised.
Yours sincerely,
Vladimir Kramnik (Classical World Chess Champion) |