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Subject: (No Longer) Searching for Bobby Fischer

Author: Stuart Cracraft

Date: 13:28:12 07/17/04


Search ends for Bobby Fischer
Fugitive chess king detained in Japan, faces extradition to U.S. for 1992 match
in violation of sanctions.

By ERIC TALMADGE
The Associated Press

TOKYO – In a bizarre end game, Bobby Fischer - the chess world's most eccentric
star - was taken into custody after trying to fly out of Japan with an invalid
passport.

Checkmate.

Wanted at home for attending a 1992 match in Yugoslavia despite international
sanctions, the American former world champion had managed to stay one move ahead
of the law by living abroad and being sheltered by chess devotees.

It was not immediately clear if Fischer would be handed over to the United
States under its extradition treaty with Japan. But his detention gives Japan a
chance to show its cooperation with the United States just days before officials
plan to bring an accused U.S. Army deserter, Charles Robert Jenkins, to Tokyo
for urgent medical treatment - a case Japanese officials want Washington to
overlook.

Jenkins, whose Japanese wife was kidnapped by North Korea in 1978 and returned
home in 2002, is wanted by Washington on desertion charges on suspicion of
defecting to North Korea in 1965. He is suffering from complications after
abdominal surgery in North Korea.

Fischer was detained at Narita Airport outside Tokyo after trying to board a
Japan Airlines flight to the Philippines on Tuesday, according to friends and
airport officials. State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said Friday that a
U.S. consular official had visited Fischer in detention but that he could not
reveal further information.

Fischer "didn't know that his passport had been revoked," said Japan Chess
Association member Miyoko Watai. "He had been traveling frequently over the past
10 years, and there was never a problem."

Watai said she had talked to Fischer in custody. She said Fischer was told he
would be deported and was planning to appeal.

Considered by many as the best chess player ever, Fischer, now 61, became a
grandmaster at age 15. In 1972, he became the first American world champion and
a Cold War hero for his defeat of Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union in a series
of matches in Reykjavik, Iceland.

The event was given tremendous symbolic importance, pitting the intensely
individualistic young American against a product of the grim Soviet Union.

It also was marked by Fischer's odd behavior - possibly calculated psychological
warfare against Spassky - that ranged from arriving two days late to complaining
about the lighting, TV cameras, the spectators, even the shine on the table.

Fischer was world champion until 1975, when he forfeited the title and withdrew
from competition because the conditions he demanded proved unacceptable to the
International Chess Federation.

After that, he lived in secret outside the United States. He emerged in 1992 to
confront Spassky again, in a highly publicized match in Yugoslavia. Fischer beat
Spassky 10-5 to win $3.35 million.

The U.S. government said Fischer's playing in the match violated U.N. sanctions
against Yugoslavia, imposed for Serb leader Slobodan Milosevic's role in
fomenting war in the Balkans.

Over the years, he gave interviews with a radio station in the Philippines,
often digressing into anti-Semitic rants and accusing U.S. officials of hounding
him.

His emergence in Japan was not a complete surprise.

Fischer was rumored to be living in the country and frequenting a Tokyo chess
club. It wasn't clear how long he had been in the country.

Fischer is believed to have last visited the Philippines in 2003.

Filipino grandmaster Eugene Torre, an old friend, said Fischer had been planning
to seek asylum in Switzerland and was caught off guard by the arrest.

"Poor Bobby," he said.




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