Motorsportuk President David Richards accused FIA President Mohamed Ben Sulayham “change” by deepening the deepened dispute in the Global Engine Management Center.
In a blid open letter, Richards undermined FIA for what he described as “transparency, accountability and integrity”. This step is followed by its exclusion after the recent sitting of the FIA World Council after signing a controversial privacy agreement required by its members.
The heart of the dispute
The heart of the dispute is Richards’ refusal to sign the updated Privacy Agreement, he does not require him to assess violations and clear procedures for any independent arbitration. Richards not only questioned the conditions, but was also hinted at broader control of centralized control under the leadership of Ben Suleyem.
“FIA management and the constitutional structure are more inclined,” Richards wrote about the unhealthy concentration of the government in the president’s hand. “It simply came to our notice then. Others have caused similar problems. “
Legal clouds and leaks
Last month ago, Richards did not support legal threats last month, which can still be resolved in court. Meanwhile, the CEO of FIA, Alberto Willyar, was fired, protecting privacy agreements as a standard procedure and interrogated why the same terms enrich.
“We struggle to understand your reluctance,” said Villarean, noting that the overflow of the past damaged the FIA’s reliability from the Motorsport Council.
Richards admitted that sensitive information in recent years has reached its own way to the media, but stopped to take a short-term WSMSC leak. Instead, he called for an open conversation with FIA’s legal advice to find a resolution, discovering that freedom media, the owner of Formula 1, received a modified version of the agreement.
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“I was not given that opportunity,” said Richards. “Other stakeholders accommodated their concerns, why not?
Leadership Fight.
Feud failed to come to a more political charged time. To re-elect this year, speculation with Ben Suleyem is revoked about the possible challenge. Richards, 72 years old, is inadmissible due to the FIA presidential age hat, but self-bespectors, according to BBC.com, are waiting for wings at least one alternative candidate.
Despite the criticism, Richards carefully lending FIA for his recent achievements. “There is a lot to be proud.” He wrote: “But we cannot ignore the erosion of transparency under the current leadership.”
Fian, in turn, refused to comment on the vale response.
Ie online media services PVT LTD