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Piastri "flattered" by rumours of Red Bull F1 interest

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NASCAR great Kyle Busch dies at 41 after illness

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Verstappen: 2027 engine changes “definitely” help me stay in F1

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Why Sainz believes F1 and FIA must be "tough" on 2027 changes

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Hamilton "still motivated" and "100% clear" he will stay at Ferrari in 2027

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It’s not overtaking, it’s “avoiding action" - why Alonso says F1 lost a full decade of “pure racing”

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Williams signs key leaders from McLaren, Mercedes, Alpine

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Canadian GP
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Behind the scenes at Pirelli: The hidden factors that go into developing F1 tyres

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Hamilton praised for hastening F1's push towards diversity change

Lewis Hamilton has been praised for helping hasten Formula 1's push to become more diverse ahead of some "major announcements" in the coming weeks

Six-time F1 world champion Hamilton has been heavily involved in the recent activism against racial injustice, sparked by the murder of George Floyd in the United States last month.

Hamilton - the only black driver in F1 history - called out F1 as an industry for its lack of response to the Black Lives Matter movement, noting the lack of diversity within the sport.

F1 stated its support for the fight against racism, calling it "an evil that no sport or society is truly immune from", while a number of Hamilton's fellow drivers also issued messages condemning racial injustice.

F1's director of strategy and business development Yath Gangakumaran has now revealed the sport is planning some "pretty major announcements more broadly around diversity and inclusion" in the coming weeks, and praised Hamilton's recent influence.

"I think any organisation or person who has millions of people following them has a duty in many ways to highlight any imperfections that are innate within their area," Gangakumaran said at the FIA eConference.

"I think what Lewis has done has really helped hasten some of the change we want to see within Formula 1.

"In a couple of weeks' time, you'll start to hear more publicly about what we're going to do.

"I think the days of sports stars being told to stick to their sports as it were are over.

"You've seen what [Marcus] Rashford has done in the last couple of days, Raheem Sterling again using a UK example, pushing for more ethnic minority representation on sports boards, obviously Lewis as well.

"I think this is going to be a trend that will continue.

OPINION: Why Hamilton's "stick to racing" critics miss the point

"Ultimately if you want to be on the right side of history, it's important that you're on the right side of that trend, and that you have purpose central to what you do as an organisation."

Since being taken over by Liberty Media in January 2017, F1 has pushed for a greater societal purpose beyond racing, such as having greater environmental sustainability and using its technology to aid the current COVID-19 pandemic.

Gangakumaran said that while F1 served primarily to entertain its fans, it had to be conscious of its wider purpose moving into the future.

"I think ultimately if we go back to the first principles, the whole purpose around F1 initially is around entertaining fans, so we need to ensure we have that front and centre of everything we do," he said.

"What's been really pleasing to see in the last several years, and particularly in this current coronavirus period, is wider societal purpose really coming to the fore.

"To give you an example of what else F1 can do outside of pushing sustainability credentials and pushing diversity and inclusion to reflect the world in which we race, we have this incredible technology and amazing engineers and scientists within F1.

"If we can apply some of that technology to major humanitarian crises, hopefully we can have a small positive impact in terms of other societal issues in terms of what the world is dealing with."

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