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 Praised as “Inspirational” They're Expected to 
	  Scour Local Junk-Yards for Materials and Parts  By Stuart Littlewood Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 16, 2012 The challenge
 Stuart Littlewood looks at the heroic efforts of students in 
	the besieged Gaza Strip to compete in an international event despite the 
	sadistic obstructions of the Israeli regime, international cowardice and 
	sheer bad luck.
 
 Last year engineering students from the Gaza 
	Strip took on the cream of Europe's technical universities in a competition 
	to build a race car, despite obstruction by the Israeli regime.
 
 Formula Student (FS) is a challenge to university students around the world 
	to design and build a single-seat racing car, which they must then put 
	through its paces at the Silverstone Circuit in the UK.
 The aim, of course, is to inspire young 
	people and boost skills in advanced engineering. Students have to pretend 
	they’ve been hired by a manufacturing firm to produce a prototype car for 
	evaluation. As well as technical skills, the exercise teaches management, 
	marketing and people skills. The motor sport industry regards FS as an ideal 
	standard of achievement for making the transition from college to workplace.Uneven playing field
 Construction of the car itself has to conform to nearly 30 pages of 
	stringent rules and regulations. A four-stroke piston engine no larger than 
	610cc must be used, and this is enough to catapult the car from 0 to 60mph 
	in just a few seconds. Electric or hybrid vehicles are also allowed. The 
	cars then go to Silverstone, the home of Formula One racing, to be judged in 
	a series of tests that include technical scrutiny and an examination of cost 
	and sustainability, presentation and engineering design. They are also put 
	through performance and endurance trials on the track.
 
 Last year’s 
	Class 1 winner was the University of Stuttgart. Stuttgart is home to 
	Mercedes-Benz and Porsche, so it's no surprise that the University is 
	renowned for its advanced automotive engineering. The Khan Younis Training 
	Centre (KYTC) in Rafah at the southern end of the Gaza Strip, however, has 
	no such iconic, cutting-edge benefactors on its doorstep.
 The lads from Gaza were entered in 
	Class 2. They won third prize for their business plan and came ninth with 
	their financial report. But Israel’s illegal blockade prevented specialty 
	parts from Italy reaching them and consequently they missed.the deadline for 
	their design and specification report and were docked a huge number penalty 
	points. Had they been awarded just an average score for that section they’d 
	have finished in the top half of the table along with Bath, Budapest, Brunel 
	and Edinburgh.
 After finalizing the plans for the car and identifying 
	the parts they needed the students contacted various suppliers around the 
	world, only to be turned down time and again. Eventually a firm in Italy 
	agreed to help, but when the parts were sent the Israelis refused to let 
	them into Gaza.
 
 The team had to improvise by salvaging parts from old 
	cars and machinery. The engine came from a used Honda motorcycle and the 
	chassis was fabricated with domestic hot water pipes. This and the lack of 
	sophisticated tools was hardly a recipe for ultimate success. Nevertheless, 
	their efforts moved Dr Colin Brown, Director of Engineering at the 
	Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IMechE), which runs the FS competition 
	at Silverstone, to declare:
 
		It really is inspirational 
		to see a team working so hard with the odds stacked against them like 
		this. Formula Student is a massive challenge in its own right, but to be 
		working with almost entirely recycled parts in one of the most deprived 
		areas in the world is remarkable.
 These students epitomize the 
		spirit and inventiveness of those who take part in Formula Student.
 It was rumoured that the Gaza team would be back this year for another 
	attempt. After wondering what could be done to give these enterprising 
	youngsters a bit of a boost while in the UK I made provisional arrangements 
	for them to tour the factory of Lola Cars, a name synonymous with motor 
	racing since the 1960s.
 But when I was finally able to contact the 
	Principal of the KYTC, Dr Ghassan Abu-Orf, he said the team couldn’t take 
	part this year but would definitely do so in 2013.
 
		Those who participated in 
		the 2011 event were in their final year and already graduated... As part 
		of our preparation for our 2013 participation, three members of KYTC 
		staff, including myself, will participate in the 2012 Formula Student 
		Competition as volunteer judges… Once our participation is confirmed, 
		the three of us will start seeking sponsorship to cover our mission. 
		Keep fingers crossed! Their next attempt, presumably, will require an all-new car and they need 
	more time. So, building on the lessons from Silverstone last year, 
	re-jigging the curriculum and learning from judging is surely a wise move.Who are these amazing youngsters?
 "We will do whatever it takes to get this group a great experience 
	here,” Lola had told me. “We will do a tour for them and it will be a very 
	educational and fun tour." A kind gesture indeed. What’s more, they’d be 
	happy to receive staff members of KYTC even if the students couldn’t make 
	it.
 
 So imagine our great sorrow and disappointment – and the massive 
	shock to the entire motor-racing world – when Lola announced two weeks ago 
	that they were going into administration.
 
 This doesn't mean that the 
	factory is closing. It continues in business with reduced staff and hopes to 
	find a new buyer. I hear six Lolas are expected to run in this month's Le 
	Mans 24-hour race.
 KYTC was set up by the 
	United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) in 2007 to provide training 
	for Palestinian refugees and inject skilled labour into the local economy. 
	One of its courses is Autotronics, which includes diagnosis, maintenance and 
	repair of automotive systems, injection and, ignition systems and 
	electronics and electrical systems.Postscript
 The tiny coastal enclave of the 
	Gaza Strip has been cruelly and illegally blockaded by Israel, with Western 
	collusion, ever since Hamas won the 2006 elections fair and square and 
	enforced their right to govern. But the great democracy-preaching powers 
	have no hesitation in strangling other people’s democracies, such as the 
	Palestinians,’ if the wrong side is elected. And they use criminal methods 
	like collective punishment, which itself goes unpunished thanks to our 
	morally bankrupt international community.
 
 In 2009 KYTC’s first 
	Autotronics class, frustrated at the lack of workshop materials for hands-on 
	automotive experience, set about building a race car from recycled parts. 
	The following year the students went one step further and built a car to the 
	exacting FS standards, and 11 students eventually travelled to the UK last 
	summer to test their prized creation.
 
 Who are these remarkable young 
	people? UNRWA says that many come from the sort of background the United 
	Nations calls “abject poverty”, which means families who don’t have the 
	financial resources to provide even the most basic necessities of life.
 
 Fate has dealt them another unkind blow by pulling the plug on Lola's 
	offer of encouragement, at least for the time being. Let us hope there are 
	other firms out there at the cutting edge who are prepared to give these 
	bright and "inspirational" lads from the hellhole of Gaza some eye-popping 
	insights into automotive engineering excellence – and bring them in from the 
	cold.
 
 Fingers crossed, as the optimistic Dr Ghassan says.
 Dr Ghassan emailed to say that the Formula 
	Student organizers have not selected him and his teaching colleagues as 
	volunteer judges for this year's event.
 So another technology window 
	to the outside world is slammed on the prisoners of Gaza.
 
 
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