MOSCOW -- Former chess champion Garry Kasparov is finding out what it takes to take on the Kremlin. He was arrested by Moscow riot police last month at a pro-democracy march he helped organize and then was grilled by Russian security agents on suspicion of seeding extremism.
On Friday, the grandmaster-turned-activist ran into the government's latest gambit.
As he checked in at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport for a morning flight to the Volga River city of Samara to lead another march, a Russian police officer took Kasparov's passport, his ticket and the passports and tickets of his colleagues, a Kasparov spokeswoman said.
Kasparov, his aides and several journalists on the same flight were detained five hours. Kasparov missed his flight and a second flight leaving for Samara. When it became clear Kasparov and his team would not make it to Samara, police returned the passports.
"It was a joke," Kasparov said. "They took our passports and didn't say anything. When we tried to leave, they said, 'You can't leave. You're not detained, but you can't leave.' They acted with such arrogance."
Russian authorities have ramped up pressure on Kasparov and his pro-democracy movement, Other Russia, since the group began organizing marches.
The movement, made up of a disparate group that includes former Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov and National Bolshevik Party founder Eduard Limonov, speaks out against what it says are the authoritarian policies of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The rallies have been modest in size, drawing no more than a couple of thousand demonstrators. Nevertheless, police have responded with massive displays of force. At an April 14 Other Russia rally in Moscow, 9,000 riot police violently dispersed demonstrators, at times clubbing marchers before throwing them into waiting police buses.
The march Kasparov missed Friday went ahead as scheduled in Samara, where Putin is holding a summit with European Union leaders. EU concerns about Russia's poor track record on human rights and democracy-building were expected to make talks tense, and Kasparov's detention only made matters worse.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied Kremlin involvement in the detention of Kasparov and his group. A Moscow airport police spokeswoman declined comment.
On Friday, the grandmaster-turned-activist ran into the government's latest gambit.
As he checked in at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport for a morning flight to the Volga River city of Samara to lead another march, a Russian police officer took Kasparov's passport, his ticket and the passports and tickets of his colleagues, a Kasparov spokeswoman said.
Kasparov, his aides and several journalists on the same flight were detained five hours. Kasparov missed his flight and a second flight leaving for Samara. When it became clear Kasparov and his team would not make it to Samara, police returned the passports.
"It was a joke," Kasparov said. "They took our passports and didn't say anything. When we tried to leave, they said, 'You can't leave. You're not detained, but you can't leave.' They acted with such arrogance."
Russian authorities have ramped up pressure on Kasparov and his pro-democracy movement, Other Russia, since the group began organizing marches.
The movement, made up of a disparate group that includes former Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov and National Bolshevik Party founder Eduard Limonov, speaks out against what it says are the authoritarian policies of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The rallies have been modest in size, drawing no more than a couple of thousand demonstrators. Nevertheless, police have responded with massive displays of force. At an April 14 Other Russia rally in Moscow, 9,000 riot police violently dispersed demonstrators, at times clubbing marchers before throwing them into waiting police buses.
The march Kasparov missed Friday went ahead as scheduled in Samara, where Putin is holding a summit with European Union leaders. EU concerns about Russia's poor track record on human rights and democracy-building were expected to make talks tense, and Kasparov's detention only made matters worse.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied Kremlin involvement in the detention of Kasparov and his group. A Moscow airport police spokeswoman declined comment.

