With recent uprising / Protests still ongoing which people do not like to admit *cough* FIA *cough* and the recent
Bombing Yesterday on 7 Police officers which has been classed as a act of terrorism,
The Question is Will the F1 Race go Ahead? The Answer, is most likely not, There has been a few interesting Articles, one from Mr Ecclestone himself saying the security cannot be 100% as the army will not provide security, something which will not happen as it will be bad for F1 in itself.
Check them out below
Mr Ecclestone said he sympathised with the teams’ anxieties. ‘If the teams don’t want to go, then we cannot make them,’ he said.”
“I feel very uncomfortable about going to Bahrain. If I’m brutally frank, the only way they can pull this race off without incident is to have a complete military lock-down there. And I think that would be unacceptable, both for Formula One and for Bahrain. But I don’t see any other way they can do it.”
“Seven Bahraini policemen were wounded, three of them seriously, when a home-made bomb exploded on Monday, an Interior Ministry spokesman said, during a protest near the capital calling for the release of an activist on a two-month hunger strike.”
Bosses urge FIA to call off Bahrain GP
Pressure is growing on the FIA to cancel - or at least postpone - the Bahrain GP after a team boss admitted that teams are "uncomfortable" travelling there.
The Sakhir circuit is due to stage the fourth race of the 2012 F1 season on the weekend of April 22, but the situation in the Gulf kingdom remains tense after fresh violence broke out over the weekend.
Seven police officers were injured when a home-made bomb exploded while protesters have also demonstrated against plans to host the grand prix in the troubled country.
The decision on whether the race goes ahead is firmly in the FIA's hands as more and more reports are emerging of teams who are unwilling to travel to Bahrain after this weekend's Chinese Grand Prix.
According to
Reuters, some teams have made contingency plans 'by routing personnel on return flights via Abu Dhabi, Dubai or Oman with alternative reservations for the last leg of the journey back from Shanghai'.
Meanwhile in an interview with the
Guardian, an unnamed team boss, who claimed his 'views were representative of the other principals', said they don't want to go to the Middle East country next weekend.
source