Sowetan

Ecclestone supports enraged Hamilton

George Floyd’s death fuels sense of injustice

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London – Former F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone has backed Lewis Hamilton after the sixtime world champion spoke about his “rage” over racial injustice following the death of George Floyd.

The 89-year-old Englishman said Hamilton and other sports stars should have the freedom to air their views.

Hamilton, the only black driver in F1, said on Tuesday he had been “completely overcome with rage at the sight of such blatant disregard for the lives of our [black] people” following the incident in the US.

“It is a good thing that Lewis does come out and the footballer­s and start talking, and they should carry on doing so,”

Ecclestone said.

Ecclestone, who oversaw the transforma­tion of F1 into a global multibilli­on-dollar commercial giant, welcomed the widespread reaction to Floyd’s death.

“As far as I am personally concerned, it is a great surprise to me it has taken so long for a black person to be so brutally killed to bring sports people’s attention to these things,” he said.

Ecclestone said he had taken a stand against racism when he removed the South African Grand Prix from the calendar in 1986 due to the former apartheid regime.

“I pulled the race out of South Africa when there was apartheid, which was wrong and disgusting,” said Ecclestone.

“I don’t see that racism has ever gone away. People have always not been very nice.”

Ecclestone compared his South African decision to when there were protests over the Bahrain Grand Prix in 2012. The previous year’s edition had been cancelled due to unrest in the country. Authoritie­s cracked down on Shiiteled protests demanding political reform. But the Bahrain race controvers­ially went ahead in 2012.

“I argued in Bahrain and supported the people who were complainin­g they had been bullied or whatever,” he said. “I met the person who was organising the protests and met with people who claimed to have been tortured.

“In this case they wanted to take over the country and that was not the case in South Africa nor now in the United States. Quite the opposite.” –

 ?? / AFP / TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA ?? Ex-F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone with racing driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain.
/ AFP / TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA Ex-F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone with racing driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain.

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