The Russian government critic and former world chess champion Garry Kasparov (60) tries not to let the fear of an attack penetrate. Yet the threat haunts him so far into his private life that he no longer drinks tea with strangers.
“What can you do? Nothing really,” he said on Thursday at the Ludwig Erhard summit in Gmund am Tegernsee, where he received the “Freedom Prize of the Media”.
The issue of this fear is “very painful” – especially when he thinks about his wife and children. At major events, he makes sure someone watches over him, Kasparov said. “And I don’t drink tea with strangers.”
At his price, he stated that according to Kasparov, it was not time to celebrate. “We are in the most tragic moment in world history since World War II,” he said. The Russian attack does not only affect Ukraine. “It’s a global battle.”
Source: Krone

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