WOKING ENGLAND – Formula One teams are keeping a close eye on the health situation in Vietnam after the Chinese Grand Prix was postponed due to the coronavirus epidemic, McLaren boss Zak Brown said on Thursday (Feb 13).
The sport is due to make its debut in the country, which borders China, on April 5 with a street race in the capital Hanoi.
Brown made it clear that his British-based team would not force any employee to go.
“Vietnam has not been raised yet as a potential issue. But obviously it is very nearby (to China) so we are going to monitor the situation,” the American told reporters at the launch of the 2020 McLaren F1 car.
“We would never do anything that puts our people at risk and I don’t believe Formula One would.”
Two local officials told Reuters on Thursday that Vietnam had quarantined a community of 10,000 people near Hanoi for 20 days because of fears the virus could spread there.
Vietnam declared a public health emergency over the epidemic on Feb 1 and banned all flights to and from China, where more than 1,300 people have died from the virus.
China would have been the fourth round of the Formula One season but that April 19 race in Shanghai was called off on Wednesday, with talk of rescheduling it later in the year even if that looks difficult.
If Vietnam is also called off, the sport faces a big hole between race two in Bahrain on March 22 and the Dutch Grand Prix on May 3.
“This is obviously a new situation for all of us,” said Brown.
“If there’s a month off, then there’s a month off.”