Motor racing: Drivers urged to help steer F1 away from 'moral vacuum'

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Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton drives during the third day of Formula One pre-season testing at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, on Feb 25, 2023.

Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton has often used his profile to address rights abuses and racial injustice around the world.

PHOTO: AFP

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Lewis Hamilton and other Formula One drivers can help steer the sport away from a “moral vacuum” by speaking out at season-opening races in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, human rights campaigners said on Tuesday.

Paul Scriven, a member of Britain’s House of Lords, told a news conference organised by the London-based Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (Bird) that the sport was at a fork in the road.

“There are two roads that F1 can now take. One is a road which is a moral vacuum where the leaders and the administrators seem to going,” he said.

“There is another road that some drivers seem to be taking... who understand they can use their platform and their sport not just for sport’s sake but for good and for change, and that they cannot ignore the human rights abuses in the country that they are driving in.”

Mercedes driver Hamilton, a seven-time world champion,

has often used his profile to address rights abuses and racial injustice

around the world.

But the sport’s governing body, the FIA, updated the sporting code last December requiring drivers to get advanced written permission to make or display “political, religious and personal statements or comments”.

Hamilton, who said in 2021 that F1 cannot ignore issues in the countries it visits, has vowed to continue speaking out and other drivers have said the same.

Bahrain hosts the opening race on Sunday, with the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix on March 19.

Bird said human rights in the two countries had been “increasingly trampled on” since the 2022 grands prix and accused F1 of helping to “facilitate sportswashing of abuses”.

The organisation also said it had written to F1 chief executive officer Stefano Domenicali, urging him to meet victims and use “all available leverage” to seek the release of jailed activists.

Scriven added that F1 drivers would be justified in refusing to race in certain countries if the sport failed to put in place a proper ethical framework.

An FIA spokesman said it could not interfere in the internal affairs of a sovereign state but was not insensitive “to any potential hardships endured by the people concerned”. REUTERS

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