Chess.com- The 2017 Women's World Championship will start in Tehran on Saturday. Among the 64 participants areformer world champions Alexandra Kosteniuk, Anna Ushenina,Antoaneta StefanovaandZhu Chen.The top seed is world number two Ju Wenjun.
We're a day away from an importanttournament that's been controversial from the moment it was announced. This year's world championship for women will be held in Iran. Hence,the participants will be forced to wear hijabs.
Because of this, not all players who qualified will travel to Iran. For example, Argentina's number one player Carolina Lujan decided to skip the event and wrote on Facebook:
"The mandatory use of hijab do not seem to me that this is a simple dress code, it means a lot and for my beliefs, beliefs and values. I'm not ready to be forced to use it. Also, due to the misinformation that is on their culture, a possible confusion could send us to jail or worse."
U.S. Champion Nazi Paikidze-Barnes went even further and started a petition demanding FIDE to reconsider Iran as the location for the tournament. Paikidze referred tothe FIDE Handbook, whichstatesthat the organization rejects discriminatory treatment for national, political, racial, social or religious reasons or on account of sex.
Paikidze's protest was covered worldwide in mainstream media, but that didn't change anything. The tournament will be held according to plan, with the opening ceremony on Friday and the first round on Saturday.
And many strong players will be playing! The top seeds (listing all 2500+ players) areJu Wenjun (CHN, 2583), AnnaMuzychuk(UKR, 2558), Alexandra Kosteniuk, (RUS, 2549),Harika Dronavalli (IND, 2539), NanaDzagnidze, (GEO, 2525),ValentinaGunina, (RUS,2524), AntoanetaStefanova, (BUL, 2512),Zhao Xue (CHN, 2505), andTan Zhongyi (CHN, 2502).
We're missing a big name here obviously: that of Hou Yifan. Thereigning world champion has decided to quit the world championship cycle for women, because she's not happy with the regulations for women, and especially the fact that there are different regulations than for her male colleagues.
Valentina Gunina in between her mother and Anna Muzychuk, at the opening ceremony.
The world championship is a knockout tournament consisting of five rounds. During the first four rounds, which will last three days each, the players play two games and then if neededa tiebreak. The final consists of four classical games and a possible tiebreak.
In total, the event will take three weeks. The prize fund is $450,000 with a first prize of $60,000 for the new women's world champion.
The tournament will be held in the five-star Espinas Palace Hotel, which is situated on a hill in the northwest of Tehran. The players won't be close to the city center, but the view is not bad.
The women's world championship will be covered on Chess.com with several reports by our special women's chess correspondent IM Jovanka Houska.