Formula One: grand prix grandees steer past Bahrain’s bloodstained realities
October F1 race threatens to join Hitler's Olympics and the Mexico City massacre among annals of sport's political blindness
The small demonstration was already breaking up when Bernie Ecclestone walked towards a Mayfair cinema opposite the Saudi Arabian embassy on Wednesday evening. He was on his way to attend the London premiere of a new documentary about the life of Ayrton Senna, the grand prix world champion who died at the wheel in 1994. The demonstrators, penned behind steel barricades while waving red and white flags and holding up photographs of people with bloodied heads, had been noisily protesting against the role of 1,200 Saudi soldiers of the Gulf Peninsula Shield Force in the attempted suppression of the recent unrest in Bahrain.
On the face of it, this was not the best of weeks for the international sporting bodies. But for Ecclestone, a man virtually impervious to criticism, a seemingly unpromising situation was about to work out just fine. Two days later, as a member of the world motor sports council of the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), Formula One's 80-year-old ringmaster joined a meeting in Paris at which the decision was made to restore the Bahrain Grand Prix to the calendar of events. To the dismay of those who believe that international sports bodies should not, in effect, be endorsing a government apparently prepared to detain and mistreat its citizens merely for protesting, the race will now take place on 30 October.
Originally due to be held in mid-March, it was cancelled in reaction to violence surrounding the demonstrations against the government. According to the FIA, which sent a fact-finding mission to the kingdom last week, the reinstatement reflects a "spirit of reconciliation" in the country, while the chairman of the Bahrain International Circuit greeted the news by writing on his Twitter account: "As a country we've faced difficult times, but stability has returned."
Yet while the members of the FIA's council were sitting down to consider their decision that morning, news agencies were reporting further confrontations at the Pearl roundabout in Manama, with rubber bullets and teargas being fired at demonstrators.
So far at least 30 people have been killed since the protests began in February. Among 800 arrests, 108 were of members of the circuit's permanent staff, all of them members of the country's Shia majority; more than 20 of them were detained and mistreated, according to reports. Human rights groups allege that women have been particularly badly treated in detention, subjected to physical abuse and threats of rape.
All this did nothing to deflect Ecclestone, who is in the habit of getting what he wants, usually in deals done behind closed doors. Whereas Sepp Blatter, president of Fifa, football's world governing body, won his latest four-year term by harvesting the support of 186 delegates out of 206 in front of the world's television cameras during Wednesday's election in Zurich, Ecclestone could take satisfaction from a vote in which all 26 council members, including himself and a member of Bahrain's ruling family, are said to have voted for reinstatement.
What Fifa and the FIA have in common is a structure and membership based on the model of a gentlemen's club. While a semblance of democracy is maintained, admission is granted to the right sort of chap (the world motor sports council is all-male, while Burundi's Lydia Nsekera is a rare female in the Fifa delegates' ranks), favours are granted and reciprocated, rocking the boat is not encouraged, and all activities are deemed to exist on a supranational plane, supposedly untainted by political influence.
Now the 2011 Bahrain Grand Prix threatens to take a place in sporting history alongside the Olympics of 1936 – "Hitler's Games" – and 1968, when 44 people, a mixture of student and civilian protesters and bystanders, were killed by soldiers in Mexico City's Tlatelolco massacre 10 days before the Games began.
Ecclestone is sport's own Duke of Edinburgh: his pronouncements are clumsy, insensitive, and unaffected by contemporary thought. He tends to attack the symptom rather than the problem because the symptom is all he sees, and usually it is costing him money. In this he is not untypical of the men who ran sport in the 20th century. It took an international boycott in 1971 to persuade the administrators of cricket and rugby that playing against the representatives of South Africa's apartheid regime was unacceptable; the grand prix circus, however, continued to pitch its tent just outside Johannesburg until 1985, when it, too, succumbed to the inevitable.
It is seven years since Ecclestone made the deal with Bahrain's ruling family to hold the Gulf's first grand prix. The negotiations were conducted with the Crown Prince, Sheikh Salman, who sanctioned the expenditure of £100m on a 3.3-mile circuit in the desert. The crown prince is a petrolhead, and Ecclestone fed his enthusiasm by sending cars from his own priceless collection for demonstration runs in front of the Bahraini spectators each year, a gesture never extended to the sell-out crowds at humble Silverstone.
This year the race in Bahrain was to have opened the world championship series, a privilege for which the government pays Ecclestone's company a reported $40m, less than half of it shared between the 12 participating teams. A month before the scheduled date of 13 March, however, Shia demonstrators gathered in Pearl Square and the race was swiftly cancelled.
On Wednesday, 48 hours before the world motor sports council met to consider the fate of this year's Bahrain Grand Prix, martial law was lifted in the kingdom, thus nudging the delegates towards a decision that would serve two sets of interests: firstly, that of the al-Khalifa family, rulers of Bahrain since 1820, and members of the power-wielding Sunni minority, who would be able to show the world, and their own people, a sign of their continued hold on the population of 1.2 million, and, secondly, that of Formula One, which would be guaranteed its $40m fee.
None of the 12 teams that make up the grand prix field, it seems, was in favour of holding the race in the present circumstances, but their reservations were based on concerns over simple logistics and personal safety rather than a high moral vision. The new date means shunting the inaugural Indian Grand Prix back to a date in December, thus extending a season already eight and a half months long, and introducing another long-haul leg of a championship which was due to end in São Paulo on 27 November and will now finish a week or two later and 8,937 miles away.
There were also questions concerning insurance cover, a major consideration in a business that travels the world with hardware worth millions of pounds, and commitments to international broadcasters whose fees form a significant proportion of the sport's revenues.
The decision to end the state of emergency probably prevents the teams from invoking a "civil strife" clause in their broadcasting deals as an excuse for staying at home without paying a penalty – unless, of course, strife can be shown to have broken out again. Now they will be trying to put pressure on the FIA to reconsider its decision, knowing that Ecclestone can crack the whip by threatening them with the consequences of broken contracts.
Damon Hill, the 1996 world champion and current president of the British Racing Drivers Club, was one of the few within in the motor racing community willing to express an opinion on the ethics of the matter. "The situation is very grave," he told the Today programme before the decision was announced. "I think that Formula One can be seen, if it's not careful, as endorsing methods of restoring order which perhaps are questionable. Formula One has to be very careful to show that it is concerned about human rights."
Only one current competitor, the forthright Australian driver Mark Webber, felt able to speak freely on the issue. "When people in a country are being hurt, the issues are bigger than sport," he wrote on Twitter. "Let's hope the right decision is made."
Like Hill, he was to be disappointed, but probably not surprised. Sport – a thing of innocence and joy that long ago became entangled in the brutal demands of commerce – was simply providing yet another demonstration of its inability to identify a winning strategy when confronted by the moral imperatives of the modern world.
BahrainFormula OneArab and Middle East unrestBernie EcclestoneMotor sportRichard Williamsguardian.co.ukBernie Ecclestone acknowledges concerns about Bahrain Grand Prix
• Head of Formula One feels FIA made a fair decision
• 21-race calendar for 2012 is announced
Bernie Ecclestone has acknowledged the reticence of Formula One teams to take part in a rescheduled Bahrain Grand Prix by stating: "Of course they'd rather not be racing in December, but these are unusual circumstances." Although his comments reference the timing rather than any moral or logistical objections many teams are understood to have.
Ecclestone feels the decision made by the FIA has been addressed fairly. "The FIA sent people out there to check on the situation, they came back and reported everything is fine. It's obvious that everybody feels they need to be safe," he said. However, he did go on to accept that it would still be dependent on the situation in the country itself: "In the end we'll have to wait and see what happens in Bahrain. If there is peace and no problems then I suppose the teams will be all right."
The FIA, meanwhile, released some of the report made by one of the people sent to check Bahrain – Spanish Motorsport Federation president, Carlos Gracia. It references positive assessments from international businesses and banks, notes the largest, mainly Shia, opposition group Al Wefaq supported the event and that travel warnings have been lifted.
As the teams debate the effects of finishing the season in December, the FIA also announced a 21-race calendar for 2012, with the anticipated mid-season meeting in Texas being added to the current roster.
Bahrain will hold the opener in March, with the final race in Brazil on 25 November. It will feature seven back-to-back race weekends.
Away from Formula One, the FIA has also announced the creation of a brand new World Championship. The World Endurance Championship will begin in 2012, using as its basis the current Intercontinental Le Mans Cup, of which the Le Mans 24 Hours is the centrepiece.
This long-distance sports car racing, for between six and 24 hours, has become increasingly popular in recent years and it is the first time the category has offered FIA driver and constructor world championship titles since the demise of the World Sportscar Championship in 1992.The 2012 FIA Formula One World Championship calendar:
11 March Bahrain
18 March Australia
1 April Malaysia
8 April China
22 AprilKorea
6 May Turkey *
20 May Spain
27 May Monaco
10 June Canada
17 June United States
1 July Valencia
15 July Great Britain
29 July Germany
5 August Hungary
2 September Belgium
9 September Italy
30 September Singapore
14 October Japan
28 October India
11 November Abu Dhabi
25 November Brazil
* Subject to confirmation
Bernie EcclestoneFormula OneMotor sportGiles Richardsguardian.co.ukLet money talk | Editorial
Racing team sponsors should put a brake on the plan to hold a grand prix in Bahrain
Sports administrators are not necessarily to be relied on for good judgment when it comes to bad regimes. The 1936 Olympics were turned into a celebration of Nazi ideals, while English sportsmen gave succour to the apartheid regime by touring South Africa. Now Formula One is on its way back to Bahrain, a kingdom with a vile recent record of human rights abuses.
Given the unlikelihood that F1's boss, Bernie Ecclestone, will pull the plug on the Bahrain grand prix of his own volition, the ball is in the court of the one group involved in sport with the most to lose by the association with Bahrain's rulers: team sponsors.
Last week, Fifa's sponsors spoke out about the scandal in world football's governing body. In 2007, following a Tour de France marked by more than usual levels of doping, sponsors threatened to pull out.
It is time for those sponsoring the Bahrain grand prix and F1 racing teams, including Red Bull, already under pressure from an online petition, to step up to the mark and demonstrate that even if F1's managers are struggling to find their conscience, its paymasters are not.
Motor sportFormula OneBahrainguardian.co.ukTrailer trash
Ayrton Senna's greatest rival emerges from obscurity, Oxford's pub life is corrupted, and Bolton supporters bask in their club's heroic war effort
Wandering freeMakers of a film about the heroic exploits of Bolton Wanderers FC during the second world war have asked the team's present-day fans to complete the financing for the movie. The film, called Wartime Wanderers, will honour the club's first team, who, in 1939, following a rousing speech by captain Harry Goslin in front of a 23,000 crowd waiting for a match at Burnden Park, marched off the pitch to join the army. Starring Rupert Grint and Jonathan Pryce (as Charles Foweraker, the manager), the film will begin shooting this autumn. The financing offer means fans who contribute will appear as extras in crowd scenes, attend the premiere and, presumably, get a cup of Bovril and a pie. See wartimewanderers.co.uk
Rub a dubTrash was shocked by a geographical liberty taken by the makers of X-Men: First Class. James McAvoy's character, Charles Xavier, is filmed downing a yard of ale in an Oxford pub. When he exits, we see the pub is called the Eagle and as the shot widens, we see that it's right under the Oxford landmark known affectionately as the Bridge of Sighs, in fact part of Hertford College. However, any Oxford student will know that there has never been a drinking establishment in this location. Perhaps it was a mutant pub and the X-People were confusing it with the Eagle and Child on St Giles', which is owned by St John's College and is famed as the drinking place of CS Lewis and JRR Tolkien.
Get karterNear the end of director Asif Kapadia's wistful Senna documentary, the Brazilian motor-racing champion is being interviewed and asked to name the opponent he most admired. To the surprise of the world's press, Senna harks back to his go-kart racing days of the 1970s ("pure racing, no politics, no money," he says) and the rivalry he enjoyed with a British racer called Terry Fullerton. The inclusion of this rare but resonant clip in the new documentary has shone a spotlight back on the obscure career of Terry Fullerton, who retired from kart racing in 1984. Fullerton, 58, who retired from kart-racing in 1984. Fullerton was at the film's starry premiere in London last week, to watch the previously unseen footage of Senna singing his praises. Also in attendance were Hugh Grant, Simon Pegg, Bernie and Tamara Ecclestone, and Formula One commentating legend Murray Walker. I hear Fullerton, the world karting champion in 1973, has now been invited by Jeremy Clarkson to drive on Top Gear.
Formula OneJames McAvoyRupert GrintBolton WanderersCS LewisJRR TolkienJason Solomonsguardian.co.uk‘Unusual circumstances’ led to F1′s Bahrain Grand Prix reinstatement
• 'The FIA reported everything is fine,' says Bernie Ecclestone
• Teams understood to be against staging of Bahrain Grand Prix
The Formula One commercial rights holder, Bernie Ecclestone, has cited "unusual circumstances" as the reason behind Friday's highly controversial decision to reinstate the Bahrain Grand Prix on this year's calendar. The race is due to be staged on 30 October and the Indian Grand Prix now scheduled for 11 December.
There was an immediate backlash to the position of the World Motor Sport Council as human rights groups voiced their opposition, while on various forums fans were left outraged. Ecclestone said: "The truth of the matter is, this was voted on by the FIA, that was it. It went through the World Council. The FIA sent people out there to check on the situation, they came back and reported everything is fine.
"It's obvious that everybody feels they need to be safe when we get there. In the end we'll have to wait and see what happens in Bahrain. If there is peace and no problems then I suppose the teams will be all right."
The ball is now in the court of the teams, notably as they told Ecclestone in a meeting in Monaco nine days ago that racing in December was "totally unacceptable", according to the Mercedes team principal, Ross Brawn.
That message appears to have been ignored, with Ecclestone adding: "Of course they'd rather not be racing in December, but these are unusual circumstances."
To assess the situation in Bahrain the FIA embarked on a "fact- finding" mission this week that was conducted in conjunction with the ministry of interior, the ministry of culture and tourism, the Bahrain Motor Federation and Bahrain International Circuit (BIC). They reported that reinstating the grand prix would be "a means of helping to unite people as the country looks to move forward".
Officials in Bahrain maintain there will be no problems when it comes to staging the grand prix. Zayed R Alzayani, chairman of the BIC, said: "By the time the grand prix arrives we will be able to remind the world about Bahrain at its best. The Bahrain Grand Prix has always been a source of national pride and it is an event than transcends politics. Its positive effect will be felt throughout the country."
The teams, however, could yet have a say if they opt to make a stand, as is now expected of them. A McLaren spokesperson said: "All Fota teams [only Hispania Racing are not represented by the Formula One Teams Association] acknowledge the decision made by the FIA World Motor Sport Council. That decision is likely to be discussed internally within Fota, and a more detailed joint position may be defined after those discussions have taken place."
Alex Wilks, the campaign director for the international organisation Avaaz, said: "Formula One's decision is a kick in the teeth for the Bahraini people. Now F1, plus Red Bull, McLaren, Ferrari, and every other team will be directly linked with a bloody crackdown that's ruined the lives of hundreds of innocent people."
Formula OneBernie EcclestoneMotor sportBahrainMiddle Eastguardian.co.uk
Formula One teams must come together over Bahrain issue | Allan McNish
• Rescheduling of Bahrain Grand Prix will extend the season
• Teams foresee a multitude of difficulties with running the race
It is important to note amid the furore surrounding the rescheduling of the Bahrain Grand Prix that the FIA's decision will not have been made lightly. And that, equally, the governing body will make no money from the race going ahead.
The vast sums associated with the debate apply specifically to Formula One. Any monetary gain from the decision will belong to Formula One, not the FIA, who will have weighed a vast range of factors to decide whether or not the race could go ahead. Having done so, any response or fallout from it lies firmly with Formula One.
So, I am sure the teams will have a voice on this decision, that it will be strong and that it will be heard; although the factors at play here are significantly more complex than they may appear on the surface.
Issues such as financial agreements, contracts, television rights, sponsors and the relationship between the organising bodies within Formula One, including the teams through the Formula One Team Association and the commercial rights holders represented by Bernie Ecclestone, will have to be weighed and assessed. Moreover, they will have to address these questions collectively and take them all into account while considering what might be the right thing to do.
If the teams feel strongly about it, and reports suggest they are strongly against it, then they are certainly in a position to make a convincing case and, if they foresee difficulties with running the race, to make their feelings known. But they will only be at their strongest when acting collectively.
Their response will, in part, be a product of how the decision directly affects them as teams. First, it shunts the season back to finishing in December, which will be sitting heavy with many. It's already a long tiring year, there's no question of that, that's why the mid-season break was brought in, and at the end of the season it's all away from Europe, there's a lot of travelling involved and there's a lot of time zone differences.
If the championship is done and dusted and Sebastian Vettel has won it again by the time you blast into that final section it's going to feel like a very, very long year indeed. At the same time, if that's the case, the teams will be focusing on 2012 in terms of development, but they will still have the season to see out right into December, making it a very heavy double load.
The main factors in terms of how tiring a season can be are governed by the number of races and the length of time between the first and the last. In this case, there will now not only be 20 races but the length of the season will be the longest for decades as well.
Equally, the emotional energy that everybody puts into a race is significantly more than just the physical energy, and, although there is no testing now, there are more races and that is far more draining. You can see it in the teams, you need time to recharge the batteries. That aspect of the rescheduling will be very, very tough for the guys.
But the drivers are the lucky ones; in January we can go off on holiday, but the engineers and mechanics have to go straight back into the office. It may lead teams to have increase their number of staff and employ double shift rotations – similar to the "test" teams of the past.
So the drivers aren't key in the issue of an extended season; it's all of the support behind the drivers that is most important, they're the ones who are constantly at work either racing or preparing for the next race. Expect any response from the teams on what is a highly contentious issue to have taken into account not only everything, but everyone involved as well.
Allan McNish raced in Formula One in 2002 and will be driving for Audi at the Le Mans 24 hours on Saturday
Formula OneMotor sportguardian.co.uk