| Turkey defends GP podium decision (Reuters)
 Updated: 2006-09-08 20:47
 ISTANBUL, Sept 8 - Organisers of the Turkish Grand Prix defended on 
Friday a decision to allow the leader of breakaway northern Cyprus to lead a 
controversial prize-giving ceremony at Istanbul's Formula One race last month. 
 Organisers have been summoned to an extraordinary meeting in Paris on 
September 19 to face charges of breaking Formula One rules. 
 The trophy was presented to Ferrari's race winner Felipe Massa by Turkish 
Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat, who was described by a television caption as 
the "President of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus". 
 Cyprus is composed of an internationally recognised Greek Cypriot south and a 
smaller, breakaway north which only Turkey recognises. 
 The island has been split along ethnic lines since Turkish troops invaded the 
north in 1974 after a brief Greek Cypriot coup backed by the military junta then 
ruling Greece. 
 "Even though the issue of the Turkish Cypriots of Northern Cyprus is a 
national cause for our country, the podium ceremony of the successful F1 race 
was in no way conducted with the purpose of gaining political advantage," 
Istanbul Chamber Of Commerce (ITO) President Murat Yalcintas said in a 
statement. 
 ITO is a majority shareholder in Istanbul's Formula One circuit. It is also 
the organiser and operator of the race. 
 FIA sources have said the matter is so serious that it could potentially 
jeopardise next year's race as well as Turkey's status within the governing 
body. 
 "According to F1 podium ceromony regulations Mr Mehmet Ali Talat, as a 
dignitary of international status, was the most senior protocol attending the 
event. For this reason he was invited to present the award to the winner of the 
race," Yalcintas said. 
 The FIA, which brings together 213 national motoring organisations from 125 
countries, said last month that political neutrality was fundamental to its role 
as a governing body.
 
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