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Lale Seddigh |
December 1, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- A pacesetting Iranian
woman has had to put the brakes on her professional motor-racing career for
something she says her male counterparts get away with all the time. But having
already achieved much in a society where gender discrimination is common, Lale
Seddigh has vowed to get back in the driver's seat.
The
31-year-old Seddigh, considered by many to be the country's foremost racecar
driver, says the Iranian Auto Racing Federation has imposed a one-year ban on
her for infringing technical rules during the fifth race of this year's
saloon-car championships.
Seddigh strongly rejects any wrongdoing, and claims that she is the victim of a
concerted campaign against her as a female racer.
"I look at it as a conspiracy on the top of other malicious acts toward me that
have happened in the past," Seddigh tells Radio Farda correspondent Farin Assemi
from Tehran.
Gender-Based Modification
The
allegations relate to an incident in which she used an alternate racecar because
her own first-line car was having mechanical trouble.
Under internationally recognized rules, engines must have a seal placed on them
before the race to show they have not had illegal modifications done at the last
minute.
Seddigh says that three male drivers used alternate cars with no engine seals in
a previous race, but that they were approved to compete by the technical
inspector of the Racing Association.
"I stepped into racing and little by
little gained titles. Then I began taking racing quite seriously."
She also gained approval for her alternate vehicle, but after she had taken part
in a heat, the Racing Association claimed she had competed in the wrong category
and barred her from the race. She subsequently received the yearlong ban.
"Why have the male race car drivers, who are many in number, not been
disqualified or barred, but just penalized in monetary terms and permitted to
participate in the next round of competition?" Seddigh asks.
When asked if she has filed a complaint with the Racing Association, Seddigh
says her father and a lawyer are helping her do so. But she says they are
hindered by the fact that she has not received any written confirmation of the
ban upon which she could build her case.
She says that in her role as a female racing driver, she had received much
public support and approval. But she adds that there were some "mean-spirited"
people who were causing problems.
Early Start
A
teacher at the Industrial College of Tehran, the 31-year-old Seddigh has been
driving since she was in her early teens.
"I was about 13 when my father started teaching me to drive," she recalls. "I
was an energetic child and liked to do exciting things. So, I started learning
to drive and when I reached the age to get my license I knew driving quite
well."
She says that in the beginning, she merely saw driving as a way to use up her
"excess energy" and never imagined becoming a professional racer. "But gradually
I stepped into racing and little by little gained titles," she says. "Then I
began taking racing quite seriously."
Seddigh now races in the saloon-car category. Previously she has competed in
Formula 3, a class of single-seater open-wheeled car that serves as a training
ground for many talented young drivers who later go on to compete in Formula 1,
the top class of international motor racing.
(Translated from Radio Farda's Persian-language interview by Iraj Gorgin)