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Pastimes : Motor Sports Notes

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To: X Y Zebra who wrote (373)3/27/2004 12:07:42 AM
From: X Y Zebra  Read Replies (1) of 764
 
Amazingly, European bureaucrats are going berzerk... [just ask Microsoft]

2 - 5 years from now, the only European Grand Prix will be the Monaco GP, the rest will be gone to Bahrain, Russia, China, Thailand, India... etc... even Zambia...

Personally, I sort of welcome the change, I am quite tired of European big-brotherism (read below) and/or American whimpyism... ("i'will sue you because my fat arse feelings got hurt", because I did not get my way since I am a lazy bastard)

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Mosley Meets Italian Minister over EAW Law

Thursday March 25th, 2004

Italy's Minister of Justice Roberto Castelli met yesterday with FIA President Max Mosley and his vice president Marco Piccinini and ACI (Italian Touring Club) president Franco Lucchesi to discuss the implications of the European arrest warrant for Formula One.

Mosley, the head of Formula One's governing body, announced earlier this month that he was to move to Monaco, following the introduction of a new European Arrest Warrant. Formula One teams fear the warrants could lead to key personnel being extradited and jailed pending trial in the event of an accident such as the one that killed Brazilian Champion Ayrton Senna at Imola in Italy in 1994.

The meeting yesterday, held at Italy's Ministry of Justice, was set after Castelli criticised the new EAW law and sided with Mosley on the issue.

"Minister Castelli shares our worry concerning the European arrest warrant and similar future legislation initiatives," Mosley said at the end of yesterday's meeting. "He hopes, like us, that criminal proceedings from dangerous sports may be started only in relation to behaviours beyond the sphere of the sport in question. We wish that a regulation in this direction will be introduced at European level."

"During the meeting," the minister himself pointed out, "Mosley illustrated the problems that may arise from an incorrect application of the European arrest warrant in relation to the intrinsic nature of F1, to the risks connected to it, and to the great media exposure of this sport.

"Indeed, effects not fully considered during the drafting of the legislation might arise, exposing the F1 world to excessive judicial risks. I have pledged to examine the problems during the taking in of this legislation."
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