Formula One Boss Ecclestone ‘Not Concerned’ about 2013 Bahrain Grand Prix

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Last month, MPs from the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee (FAC) published a report that slammed the UK government for holding double standards on human rights issues.

“We find it difficult to discern any consistency of logic behind the government’s policy in not taking a public stance on the Bahrain Grand Prix but implementing at least a partial boycott of the 2012 Uefa football championship matches played in Ukraine,” the committee said.

Britain has recently signed a defence agreement with the Gulf kingdom to “bolster Bahrain’s security with regards to its regional standing, as well as its internal stability”.

Ecclestone also raised the possibility of a third grand prix in the Gulf, this time in Qatar.

“Let’s see. Let’s see what comes out of it,” he said, referring to officials who are trying to get the licence to allow Qatari to host F1 teams for testing.

Jailed for a tweet

Ecclestone’s statement came after a Bahraini court sentenced one of the four men who have been convicted for defaming king Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa on Twitter to six months in prison.

The court also ordered the activist’s laptop and mobile to be seized.

Criticising King Hamad and other members of the al-Khalifa ruling family is forbidden in Bahrain.

“Bahrain recently changed their laws to be tougher on those who use Twitter to criticise the regime,” Dominic Kavakeb, political strategist for the Bahrain Justice Development Movement, told IBTimes UK.

Bahrain’s cyber defamation laws were reviewed in September, resulting in heavier monitoring of social media networks. 

In October, activist and human rights defender Zainab Al-Khawaja, daughter of renowned human rights campaigner Abdulhadi, was released after serving a two-month prison sentence for ripping up a photo of the king of Bahrain. She is expecting verdicts on several cases in the coming weeks.  

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