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Miles also had his disagreements with chess authorities and with his fellow English players, particularly Keene and Short.
Miles made accusations regarding payments that Keene had received from the British Chess Federation for acting as his second ( assistant ) in the 1985 Interzonal tournament in Tunis.
Miles became rather obsessed with the affair, eventually suffering a mental breakdown over it.
He was arrested in September 1987 in Downing Street, apparently under the belief that he had to speak to then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher about the matter.
He was subsequently hospitalised for two months.
Writing in the Daily Telegraph in November 2003, Nigel Short claimed that " Tony was insanely jealous of my success, and his inability to accept that he was no longer Britain's number one was an indication of, if not a trigger for, his descent into madness.

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