Pakistan withdraw from India chess tournament over Kashmir issue

Pakistan has accused India of politicising the 44th Chess Olympiad being hosted in the country by holding a torch relay through the disputed territory of Kashmir.
2 min read
India is hosting the world's biggest chess tournament in the southern city of Chennai [Getty]

Pakistan have withdrawn from the world's biggest international chess tournament in protest at hosts India holding a torch relay for the event through disputed Kashmir, officials said Thursday.

The 44th Chess Olympiad will see over 1,700 players from 188 nations compete in Chennai from now until August 10.

The last two competitions were played virtually because of the pandemic.

Kashmir has weathered decades of violence and upheaval since it was partitioned between India and Pakistan when both countries became independent in 1947.

The neighbours both claim it in full and have fought two of their three wars over control of the territory.

"By passing the torch relay through Indian-administered Kashmir... India has committed a travesty that the international community cannot accept under any circumstances," Pakistan's foreign ministry said in a statement.

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It said the matter would also be raised with the International Chess Federation and condemned the "mischievous attempt to mix politics with sports".

A spokesman for India's foreign ministry called the decision "surprising" and in turn accused Pakistan of politicising the event.

"I was told the team was already here," Arindam Bagchi told AFP.