SAUDI ARABIA

Saudi woman drives F1 car on historic day

June 24, 2018
Aseel Al-Hamad of Saudia Arabia drives a Lotus Renault E20 Formula One car during a parade before the Formula One F1 - French Grand Prix on Sunday. — Reuters
Aseel Al-Hamad of Saudia Arabia drives a Lotus Renault E20 Formula One car during a parade before the Formula One F1 - French Grand Prix on Sunday. — Reuters

LE CASTELLET, France — Aseel Al-Hamad declared the start of a new era for Saudi women in motorsport on Sunday as she prepared to drive a Formula One car around the French Grand Prix circuit in front of thousands of fans.

The lap of Le Castellet’s Paul Ricard track, in a race-winning 2012 Lotus Renault E20 car, came on the day a ban ended on female drivers getting behind the wheel on the Gulf kingdom’s roads.

“I believe today is not just celebrating the new era of women starting to drive, it’s also the birth of women in motorsport in Saudi Arabia,” Al-Hamad told Reuters in the Renault hospitality.

“The most important thing I am looking forward to is to start seeing the next generation, young girls, trying (motorsport),” she said.

“I want to watch them training and taking the sport very seriously as a career. This is going to be really my biggest achievement.”

Sunday was not the first time Al-Hamad had driven a Formula One car, the Saudi interior designer and businesswoman trying out the same one at the circuit on June 5 as part of a familiarization day.

But that was private, whereas Sunday was very public as part of parade of the French manufacturer’s historic racing cars to mark the return of Formula One to France after a 10 year absence.

The car took 2007 world champion Kimi Raikkonen, now at Ferrari, to victory in Abu Dhabi in November 2012.

“I never even imagined it in my dreams. So the opportunity was amazing,” she said of her first outing. “That day I thought it was the only lifetime experience. And they invited me again.

“It’s a great honor for me to share with them the celebration and passion for Renault.

“I believe the beauty of this story is that everything is possible, even if you dream the impossible you can still achieve it,” she said.

Al-Hamad is already the first female member of the Saudi Arabian Motorsport Federation and on the Women in Motorsport Commission set up by Formula One’s governing body, the International Automobile Federation (FIA).

She is also the first woman to import a Ferrari into Saudi Arabia, and has taken her 458 Spider to racetracks around the world to take part in track days, workshops and professional racing courses.

Asked whether there would now be female Saudi racing drivers, she replied: “For sure, definitely. And this is going to be my mission in Saudi.

“Thanks to Renault, by this gesture I can be hopefully an ambassador to push it more in Saudi.

“The Women in Motorsport Commission is encouraging the participation in all sectors of motorsport, including racers, engineers, mechanics and marshals,” she said, adding that she could also see Saudi women working in F1.

“The beautiful thing is that motorsport is not a sport that is divided. So women are able to compete equally with everyone. We just have to dream to have more women in all job sectors of motorsport.”

Michele Mouton, a former rally driver and president of the FIA’s commission, said in a statement she hoped Al-Hamad’s example would help pave the way for more Saudi women to get involved. — Reuters


June 24, 2018
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