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Baku residents brace for higher costs, annoyances, and logistical issues ahead of Formula 1 race

June 9, 2022
in Politics
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Baku residents brace for higher costs, annoyances, and logistical issues ahead of Formula 1 race
Photo by Glen Wheeler on Unsplash. Free to use under the Unsplash License.

Baku, Azerbaijan, is once again hosting a Formula 1 race between June 10–12, and the residents of the capital are in disagreement about whether the race is worth the cost, annoyances, and logistical issues. According to some residents, the annual inconveniences are testing their patience as hiked taxi fares, limited pedestrian movement along the circuit, traffic jams, and noise pollution disrupts their lives. The city administration already started restricting traffic as of June 6.

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Çox mənasız iddiadır. Birincisi iddia edilən sənəd heç dərc olunmayıb (press relizdə belə xərclər barədə heç bir şey qeyd edilmir). İkincisi bu gəlir hipotetikdir (əgər reklama xərcləsəydik bu qədər xərcləməli olacaq idik. Bəs bunun xeyri varmı? Çox mənasız metodologoyadır).

— Toghrul Valiyev (@ToghrulValiyev) June 6, 2022

Gəlin belə danışaq, PwC-nin bu sənədini görən olubmu (qısa mətbuat relizi sənəd deyil)? Görən olubsa, konkret rəqəmləri təqdim edə bilərmi? Yəni hipotetik yox, məhz konkret. https://t.co/qGtazZBhS0

— Toghrul Valiyev (@ToghrulValiyev) June 6, 2022

Let's talk straight here, has anyone seen this document by PwC (short press release is not a document)? If someone has seen it, then can they share concrete numbers? I am not talking about the hypothetical numbers but concrete numbers.

And there is also the issue of ticket costs. The cheapest ticket available costs USD 70 (approximately AZN 118.9), while the highest and according to the Baku City Circuit website best guaranteed view spot package deal costs USD 5,370 (approximately AZN 9,123) from the Paddock Club for the duration of the race. According to most recent available data, monthly nominal wage in Azerbaijan totals to AZN 768,3 (USD 452) making the race tickets a pricey investment.

Will Netflix care?

While there won't be any star-studded performances as in previous years, due to the pandemic, one guest was featured in Azerbaijani media. Netflix representatives will be in attendance to film the race as part of its “Formula 1: Drive To Survive” series. It is highly unlikely that the series producers will touch on any of the sensitive state issues, as it often focuses on drivers and race drama, rather than political intrigue.

But it is not just Netflix staying silent about the country's dismal human rights record. In the past, whenever Azerbaijan hosted a sport or cultural event, activists and human rights advocates took the opportunity to highlight the country's human rights violations and political missteps. But not this year. In an interview with Global Voices, Rebecca Vincent, Director of Operations and Campaigns at the Reporters Without Borders said, there are a number of reasons for that:

Unfortunately we're at a moment where campaigning in connection with mega global events is often less impactful than it may have been in previous years. We've campaigned heavily in connection with mega events in Azerbaijan for years — such as Eurovision in 2012 and the European Games in 2015. We had successes in gaining widespread international attention to human rights violations in the country, and eventually in securing releases in individual cases of jailed journalists and activists, but unfortunately the cycle of politically motivated arrests continued, as did the international community's business as usual with the Aliyev regime.

Vincent, however, notes that lack of public scrutiny is an ongoing trend with the racing conglomerate.

Formula One has demonstrated it cares very little about the human rights standards in the countries where it chooses to hold races, including Bahrain and Saudi Arabia. But Azerbaijan is an excellent example of the sort of hardening of public attitudes towards these issues over time. The international public becoming more accustomed to countries with poor human rights records hosting these events, [and] also becoming far too comfortable with these events triggering a wave of violations themselves, either to silence critics ahead of the media spotlight that accompanies such events, or to punish them afterwards for speaking out.

For Azerbaijani human rights campaigners, the negative impact of the pandemic and the war in Ukraine, both had a role to play in the lack of advocacy campaigns. In an interview with Global Voices, Anar Mammadli said although the country featured heavily in a number of international campaigns previously —Eurovision, the European Games, and others — these international incidents shifted global attention. “Attention is on Ukraine, there is a humanitarian crisis. So all of the attention of international organizations is on Ukraine.” But these are not the only reasons, explained Mammadli. “In countries like ours, the work of international organizations is virtually nonexistent. Azerbaijan is closed like Russia and Belarus to the international world while local human rights organizations are weak. Their work is restricted in what they can do. And in the absence of international support, they cannot organize campaigns as they don't have the capacity.” What seems clear, is when the BCC kicks off their 2022 circuit on June 10, the spectators cheering and boom of the engines may just be loud enough to mute the voices of critics and opponents, just as the race has done since 2016.

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