Former F1 boss Ecclestone says black people are often 'more racist' than white people
In an exchange with CNN Ecclestone said racism "makes me so upset"
Former CEO of Formula One, and a name synonymous with the sport, Bernie Ecclestone has claimed that black people are "more racist" than white people in a television interview.
He added that Formula One has been "too busy" to deal with racism, reports The Guardian.
In an exchange with CNN Ecclestone said racism "makes me so upset".
He also, however, says he hadn't thought that Lewis Hamilton's own experiences of racism had affected the driver. Hamilton, the six-times world champion, recently said he had experienced the "stigma of racism" throughout his F1 career.
Asked by interviewer Amanda Davies whether Formula One should have done more to tackle racism, Ecclestone says: "I don't think anyone bothered about it before. They are too busy trying to win races or find sponsors or something. Really other things that are of little if any interest."
He praised Hamilton for his role campaigning for Black Lives Matters on the subject of the Hamilton Commission, a body set up by the world champion to help increase diversity in motorsport and overcome the "institutional barriers" he says he experienced in F1.
Ecclestone said: "I don't think it's going to do anything bad or good for Formula One. It'll just make people think which is more important. I think that's the same for everybody. People ought to think a little bit and think: 'Well, what the hell. Somebody's not the same as white people and black people should think the same thing about white people.' In lots of cases, black people are more racist than what white people are [sic]."
Asked about criticism over whether the sport took Hamilton's complaints seriously enough, Ecclestone said: "I am really unhappy if he took it seriously. I never thought he did. I didn't think it affected him."
Later in the interview, Ecclestone went on to suggest that it is not even the responsibility of his former sport to tackle racist behaviour.
"I suppose the people that need to do that are the viewers. For the number of people that are directly involved in sport such a small number of people can do very little", he said.
"I am surprised if anyone in Formula One, certainly the teams and the people like the promoters, have any concern about this. I think it's the public at large that have to start thinking.
"I don't honestly believe over the years in general people have been that much concerned. They should have been. It's not a good excuse not to be concerned but everybody's too busy doing things that they have to do on a day-to-day to think about something that doesn't directly affect them. It probably affects all of us but not directly."