FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem is alleged to have told officials not to certify the track used for last year’s Las Vegas Formula One Grand Prix, the BBC reported on Tuesday citing a whistleblower.
Ben Sulayem is said to have asked officials “to find some concerns to prevent the FIA from certifying the circuit before the weekend of the race”, according to an internal FIA report consulted by the BBC.
It is the latest scandal to hit F1 in the season’s early stages, which have been plagued with off-track issues.
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Ben Sulayem himself was in the headlines earlier this week over claims he tried to interfere with last year’s Saudi Arabian Grand Prix — a claim brought to the BBC by the same whistleblower.
Meanwhile, Christian Horner remains engulfed in controversy over claims of lewd messages to a female colleague. He was cleared by independent investigators, although an email leak of text screenshots, alleged to be from Horner, was released soon after to keep the issue in the spotlight.
And on a less controversial, but just as dramatic, note, one of the biggest flashpoints of the Bahrain Grand Prix was when Yuki Tsunoda almost caused a cooldown lap crash with his teammate Daniel Ricciardo, who promtly called the driver a “f**king helmet”.
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In regards to the latest controversy involving Ben Sulayem, however, according to the whistleblower mentioned in the compliance report, “the purpose was to find fault with the track in order to withhold the licence”.
“Issues on the circuit were meant to be artificially identified regardless of their actual existence, with the ultimate goal of withholding the licence,” the source added.
The report, from the FIA’s compliance officer to its ethics committee, adds officials were “unable to find any concerns with the circuit and therefore certified the circuit fit for the race”.
A spokesperson for motorsport’s governing body told AFP: “The FIA confirms that the Compliance Officer has received a report detailing potential allegations involving certain members of its governing bodies.
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“The Compliance Department is assessing these concerns, as is common practice in these matters, to ensure that due process is meticulously followed,” they added.
It is unclear why the head of the FIA, who succeeded Jean Todt in December 2021, would have wanted to stop the race going ahead as planned.
The new Las Vegas Grand Prix, which came 41 years after the city last staged an F1 race, is a flagship event for the sport’s American owners Liberty Media. It is one of three held in the United States now, with races also in Austin and Miami.
According to the BBC, citing the same source, Ben Sulayem also requested officials scrap a penalty imposed on Fernando Alonso in Saudi Arabia last year.
The accusation appears in the same compliance report.