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    Chess prodigy: 'Jessie hated her father, but not enough to kill herself'
    Friends of chess prodigy who fell to her death from a hotel window dismiss
    suicide theory, despite rape allegations against her father


    By Lauren Veevers
    30 July 2006

    Friends and coaches of Jessie Gilbert, the chess prodigy who plunged
    to her death from an eighth-floor hotel window last week, spoke
    yesterday of their shock at learning that her father is accused of
    raping her.

    Jessie, 19, was remembered at the Weald Chess Congress in Crawley,
    where a minute's silence was held before around 100 players from
    across Sussex, Kent and Surrey - Jessie's home county - began the
    first round of the competition. Jessie was supposed to have been
    playing in the top section of the tournament, and many here knew the
    teenager and her family well.

    It emerged yesterday that Jessie's father, Ian Gilbert, a 48-year-old
    City banker, had been charged with seven counts of rape and two
    indecent assaults. Surrey police confirmed that Mr Gilbert was
    awaiting trial at Guildford Crown Court on 21 August.

    Members of Jessie's chess club, Wood Green in Surrey, were
    particularly saddened by claims that she had jumped from her hotel
    window in the Czech Republic, where she was staying during an
    international chess tournament. Early reports had suggested that her
    death was the result of sleepwalking, which Jessie was known to suffer
    from.

    Chess players from Jessie's area were largely unaware of the troubles
    she had been facing in her home life, and were stunned by the
    accusations against her father. Susan Lalic, 40, a grandmaster who
    played against Jessie in a tournament last year, said:

    "I don't believe that it could have been suicide. Even if the claims
    are true, there is no way it is something Jessie would do.

    "She had her whole life before her. Jessie was a real fighter. She was
    bubbly, clever and considerate. I don't think she would have done this
    to her family on purpose.''

    Another friend, who did not wish to be named, said: "We all knew that
    Jessie's mum and dad had split up, but that was years ago. She didn't
    see her dad. She hated him. They moved recently because of him, but
    she wouldn't kill herself over it.''

    Jessie, who came to prominence at the age of 11 when she won the
    Women's World Amateur Championship, the youngest player ever to do so,
    was sharing the hotel room with her best friend Amisha Parmar, 14. It
    is believed the girls had been drinking heavily on the night of
    Jessie's death.

    Jessie's mother, a research scientist, and her three sisters, were
    heavily involved in the chess world, but it was Jessie who showed the
    most talent from a young age. Jonathan Tuck, who had coached Jessie at
    the world championships, said: "Jessie's mum was keen for her to do
    well. She encouraged her a lot. It is important for young players to
    dedicate a lot of time and effort to it, and that is what I remember
    about Jessie. She focused 100 per cent. Her concentration level was
    exceptional - she would sit for hours taking in the board.''

    Sue Maguire, whose son plays chess at Jessie's club said: "Nobody
    likes to speculate whether Jessie jumped or was sleepwalking. It is
    just so sad that the chess world has lost such a bright spark.''

    Jessie was known by friends to have self-harmed on several
    occasions. One said: "I think she did cut herself from time to time,
    but I don't think it was a big problem for her.''

    Jessie was in the middle of the tournament, which consisted of five
    rounds, and was doing well. She was taking a gap year and had planned
    to go to Oxford University to study medicine.

    Jessie's sleepwalking was often serious. One friend at yesterday's
    tournament said: "Jessie once told me that she had jumped out of a
    first-floor window when she was sleepwalking. When she woke up she
    told her mum that she had been trying to fly. I am 90 per cent sure
    that is what happened."

    Her friend added that Jessie "phoned home a lot when she was away, as
    she was very close to her mum and sisters''.

    The pressure: A brutal, competitive world

    The tragic case of Jessie Gilbert has shed new light on the world of
    competitive chess, which, far from the genteel, intellectual pastime
    many consider it, can often be brutal, exhausting and fiercely
    competitive.

    Just last month, at the Chess Olympiad in Turin, two grandmasters -
    England's Danny Gormally and Armenia's Levon Aronian - took their
    rivalry to a new level when Gormally, 30, reportedly punched Aronian
    in the face. The dispute, thought to be sparked by rivalry over female
    grandmaster Arianne Caoili, demonstrated the pressure-cooker
    atmosphere of major chess tournaments.

    Chess prodigies can run an increased risk of emotional or social
    problems as they grow up, says Linda Blair, clinical psychologist at
    the University of Bath. She said it was not their high spatial ability
    that was the problem, but the way people, particularly parents,
    responded to and focused on that ability. Too often, this resulted in
    the best players being seen as eccentric or "loners". JT

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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