Lewis Hamilton praised for defending LGBTI rights during F1 Qatar Grand Prix
Lewis Hamilton prepares to drive during practice ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Qatar at Losail International Circuit on November 19, 2021.
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Formula One driver Lewis Hamilton has been
widely praised after showing his support for the LGBTI community during a
practice session Friday for the Qatar Grand Prix.
Hamilton wore a helmet featuring the Pride
Progress Flag, a redesigned and more inclusive version of the traditional
rainbow flag, and emblazoned with the words "We Stand Together."
The flag features additional black and brown
stripes to highlight the oppression of people of color, as well as pink and
blue stripes for the trans flag and a purple circle on a yellow background,
which is the intersex flag.
Although the Pride Progress Flag was
initially designed by American artist Daniel Quasar in 2018, it was British
intersex activist and columnist Valentino Vecchietti who finalized the version
seen on Hamilton's helmet, which includes the intersex flag.
"It means everything," Vecchietti
told CNN. "I can't express what an amazing, massive, massive thing
Lewis Hamilton has done. And I feel emotional talking about it, because we are
so hidden and stigmatized as a population."
According to the United Nations Free and
Equal campaign, up to 1.7% of the global population is intersex, or does not
have sex characteristics that conform to "typical binary notions of male
and female."
Highlighting the erasure of intersex people
both within the LGBT+ movement and in society as a whole, Vecchietti said
Hamilton's gesture would also raise awareness of the vilification of intersex
athletes like Caster Semenya and Dutee Chand in sport.
"We have to remember that young kids
with intersex variations growing up in school see all this media," she
said. "As an intersex person myself, at school, I grew up with so much
stigma and shame and feeling I had to keep it hidden ... Lewis Hamilton has
done something amazing. He's given me a platform to begin these conversations
on a much larger scale."
Vecchietti, the founder of Intersex Equality
Rights UK, designed the flag with the support of Stonewall and the LGBT
Consortium, and her design quickly went viral after it was shared on social
media in May.
Hamilton's decision to wear the flag on his
helmet also comes at the end of Trans Awareness Week, while Saturday marks the
International Transgender Day of Remembrance.
Racing Pride, which aims to promote LGBTQ+
inclusion in motorsport, also praised Hamilton, calling the helmet "a
magnificent and powerful gesture of solidarity."
The Qatar Grand Prix has come under scrutiny
due to the country's human rights record, particularly towards LGBTI
individuals. Homosexuality is illegal and punished with a fine or a prison
sentence, and trans people cannot legally change gender.
According to a report into state-sponsored
homophobia by Lucas Ramón Mendos of the human rights group ILGA World, Qatar
"runs Sharia courts, where technically it is possible that Muslim men
could be put to death for same-sex sexual behaviours."
However, the report adds: "It does not
appear that any person has been executed for this reason or at all."
In an interview with CNN's Amanda Davies in
2017, Nasser Al Khater, the chief executive of Qatar's 2022 World Cup
organizing committee, said: "We are not putting any restrictions on any
nationality or anybody with respect to their gender, race, orientation,
religion to attend this World Cup."
According to Reuters, Hamilton told reporters
in Qatar on Thursday that it "seems to be deemed as one of the worst in
this part of the world" for human rights violations, and said sports were
"duty bound to raise awareness for these issues."
The sportsman previously spoke up in support
of LGBTI rights in Hungary ahead of the Hungarian Grand Prix in August. He is
expected to wear his Pride helmet for the actual competition in the Qatar Grand
Prix, which will take place on November 21.
For Vecchietti, this is monumental in terms
of representation for the intersex community.
"I wished and hoped for this sort of
visibility, as you always do," she said. "But I had no idea that
somebody as huge as Lewis Hamilton would make this fantastic statement of
solidarity."


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