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  • Self-exiled Kasparov requests Latvian citizenship

    Transitions online, Czech Rep.
    Nov 6 2013

    Self-exiled Kasparov requests Latvian citizenship

    Garry Kasparov


    Former chess champion and Russian opposition leader Garry Kasparov
    wants to acquire Latvian citizenship, Reuters reports.

    Kasparov made the request in a letter to Latvian parliamentarians
    dated 31 October.

    "The letter is genuine. We submitted it and are his representatives.
    Tomorrow [6 November] we will start discussions with the political
    parties," family friend Arturs Avotins told AFP.

    Kasparov, 50, a longtime Kremlin critic, writes, "As a Latvian
    citizen, I will obtain the chance to engage without restriction in
    political activities in the name of democracy, peace, and justice in
    Russia."

    Reuters quotes another passage of the letter as saying, "Every Latvian
    has the right to express his opinion freely, participate in the
    political process, and not be afraid of unlawful persecution."

    A spokeswoman for the Unity party, part of the ruling coalition, said
    Kasparov wanted to retain his Russian citizenship as well. Under
    Latvian law, dual citizenship with Russia can be granted to
    individuals of special merit or to those who have been of service to
    Latvia, AFP reports. The mother of Kasparov's son Vadim, Yulia, is
    Latvian.

    Kasparov, regarded as among the greatest chess players of all time,
    turned to politics after his chess career and was a leader of the
    Other Russia opposition coalition in the mid-2000s. In June he fled
    Russia, saying he feared arrest for taking part in anti-government
    demonstrations, later telling David Frost he would not be returning to
    the country. He may now be in the United States or Switzerland, AFP
    writes.

    3. Tajik migrants largely excluded from presidential vote

    Tajikistanis are electing a president today, but the most economically
    active segment of the population is largely excluded from the process,
    EurasiaNet.org comments.

    "[T]he lack of genuine electoral options is a source of frustration
    for an important constituency - the million-strong community of Tajik
    labor migrants in Russia," EurasiaNet.org's David Trilling writes.
    Annually, remittances sent home by migrant workers based mostly in
    Russia amount to the equivalent of nearly half the country's gross
    domestic product, the World Bank estimates.

    The Russian Migration Service estimates that 1.2 million Tajikistanis
    work in the country. Tajikistan's population is around 8 million.

    "In a competitive election, the vote of this migrant population could
    swing the outcome and would be something that politicians eagerly
    courted. But throughout the campaign authorities have kept the migrant
    population marginalized, its leaders complain," Trilling writes.

    Observers concur that incumbent President Imomali Rahmon will easily
    overcome his five obscure challengers to win another seven-year term.

    Oynihol Bobonazorova, a candidate whose background as a human rights
    activist might have drawn migrants to her campaign, was excluded from
    the race for failing to gather the required 210,000 signatures.

    The elections commission will not accept signatures from migrants
    because Tajikistani officials cannot certify them, EurasiaNet.org
    writes.

    Some migrants in St. Petersburg and nearby districts cast early
    ballots 4 November, Asia-Plus reports.

    Tajikistani election workers set up polling stations in 24 Russian
    cities and regions.

    However, an elections commission spokeswoman interviewed by
    EurasiaNet.org last week was unable to specify where the polling
    stations would be located. A foreman in charge of a work crew of 100
    Tajiks in Moscow said he did not know where to vote.

    http://www.tol.org/client/article/24034-tajikistan-goes-to-the-polls-kasparov-seeks-latvian-citizenship.html

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