Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

news

Israel-Premier Tech cycling team confronted by pro-Palestine group at Tour of Britain, with more protests planned this week

Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign activist confronted team on the eve of the race and accused staff of "sportswashing" and "supporting genocide"...

The Israel-Premier Tech cycling team have been confronted by pro-Palestine activists ahead of the Tour of Britain, with further protests expected at each of the stages this week.

In a video posted on Instagram by the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign (SPSC), an activist is seen approaching staff at one of the team's cars in the Scottish Borders town Peebles yesterday evening, ahead of the British stage race getting underway in Kelso today.

An Israel-Premier Tech spokesperson told road.cc the team remains "excited to race" and "respects everyone's right to free speech so the protests that are expected at the Tour of Britain do not pose a problem".

Pro-Palestine protesters at Tour of Britain Sept 2024 (Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign)

Pro-Palestine campaign groups Show Israel the Red Card, Scottish Friends of Palestine, Scottish Sport for Palestine, and the SPSC called on British Cycling to remove the team from the race, with protests planned at each of the stages, including one in Kelso this morning. The groups have also reportedly emailed British Cycling CEO Jon Dutton calling for the team's exclusion.

Last night, Israel-Premier Tech staff were approached by an activist accusing them of "sportswashing", the practice of using sport to redirect public attention away from unethical conduct, the activist asking if they had "anything to say about your owner supporting a genocide?"

There was no response from the staff who got in the team car and were seen driving off. In March, we reported that Israel-Premier Tech had removed the Israel name from its vehicles as a "precautionary measure", the UCI ProTour team of Chris Froome and Michael Woods insisting that they "continue to race proudly as Israel – Premier Tech".

Pro-Palestine protesters at Tour of Britain Sept 2024 (Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign)

Scottish Borders SPSC Chair Elisa Smith said: "The ICJ has ruled that the situation in Gaza is a 'plausible case for genocide' and that Israel is operating a system of apartheid in Palestine.

"Israel Premier Tech's primary objective is that when you hear 'Israel' you don't think of IOF [Israel Occupation Forces] snipers paralysing athletes, 16,000 dead children in Gaza, or the raping of Palestinian detainees.

"Instead, they want you to focus on Chris Froome making a record-breaking time or Tel Aviv's rooftop bars, as evidenced by Israel's Tourism Board team jerseys and their social media feed. The team and its ownership certainly don't want people to think of Gaza's Paralympic cycling team, Gaza Sunbirds, which is made up of amputees who've lost their limbs as a result of Israeli aggression."

The activist was seen offering the staff a Palestinian flag, asking: "You don't want to put this on your car?"

"Cycling is sportswashing," the SPSC activist added. "What you are doing is sportswashing [...] why have you taken Israel off your team car? Because you guys know, don't you? That you're supporting a genocide."

The SPSC post also states: "Join us tomorrow, 3rd September, in Kelso to protest British Cycling's shameful inclusion of the war criminal state in the Tour of Britain! Say no to sports washing genocide!"

Explaining the protests, Maree Shepherd of Show Israel the Red Card told The National: "There can be no business as usual if you choose to ignore the plight of Palestinians and partner with the perpetrating occupying regime, Israel, as it carries on with the wholesale destruction of every aspect of Palestinian life.

"From football to the Olympics and now cycling, we are sick of our beloved sports being tainted by the inclusion of Israeli teams, many of whom serve in the Israeli army and facilitate the abuse of Palestinians through the decades-long military occupation and war.

"Israel can no longer get away with committing atrocity after atrocity. Neither can anyone who attempts to sportswash it."

Similar protests are planned for the rest of the week as the race travels south through England, Big Ride for Palestine and Sheffield Palestine Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid hosting one in Sheffield ahead of Thursday's third stage.

"British Cycling, Sheffield City Council, and the South Yorkshire Mayor make themselves complicit in the war crimes, genocide and apartheid of Israel clearly identified by the International Court of Justice," Jonny Feldman of both campaign groups said.

In January, Chris Froome appeared in an official Israel state video promoting a cycling event to support Gaza hostages. The video was posted by official Israel accounts and the Israel Foreign Ministry on social media.

Chris Froome RideToBringThemHome promotional video (Twitter/official Israel account)

Three months later activists called for protests against the team after Froome's wife deleted her social media accounts after launching a series of posts, one stating that Muslims are a "drain on modern society".

The agent and wife of Chris Froome said Muslims were "here to take over" and claimed "there are no innocent Gazans" during a string of social media posts, with the UCI ProTeam distancing itself from "comments made by third parties".

In March, the team told us they had removed mention of Israel from team vehicles as a "precautionary measure" following safety advice from "European police authorities".

"We continue to race proudly as Israel – Premier Tech with the team name and Israel branding on the racing kit as it was in previous years. As previously stated, the team adopted a number of precautionary measures ahead of the 2024 season," a spokesperson told us.

"The decision was made to use the IPT monogram, comprised of the Star of David and the Premier Tech 'PT', on the team vehicles and other branded elements. The team monogram has been an integral part of the Israel – Premier Tech brand identity since 2023 when it was first adopted on the back of the team jersey and this vehicle branding has been on display since IPT's first races in Europe in February this year."

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

Add new comment

100 comments

Avatar
Gbjbanjs replied to john_smith | 3 months ago
6 likes

As disgusting and abhorent as the October attack was, you need an incredibly narrow view of that situation to justify what Israel have done before and since.

Avatar
ErnieC replied to Gbjbanjs | 3 months ago
1 like
Gbjbanjs wrote:

As disgusting and abhorent as the October attack was, you need an incredibly narrow view of that situation to justify what Israel have done before and since.

So they should have turned the other cheek? Accepted, shrugged and moved on? Would you have been happy with the UK adopting that approach during the Troubles or was it acceptable then?

Avatar
Crazyhorse replied to ErnieC | 3 months ago
3 likes

The UK decided to negotiate with its sworn enemy the IRA and that brought an end to the Troubles. Or do you think that was also a mistake?

Avatar
Crazyhorse replied to ErnieC | 3 months ago
2 likes
ErnieC wrote:
Gbjbanjs wrote:

As disgusting and abhorent as the October attack was, you need an incredibly narrow view of that situation to justify what Israel have done before and since.

So they should have turned the other cheek? Accepted, shrugged and moved on? Would you have been happy with the UK adopting that approach during the Troubles or was it acceptable then?

The UK decided to negotiate with its sworn enemy the IRA and that brought an end to the Troubles. Or do you think that was also a mistake?

Avatar
ErnieC replied to Crazyhorse | 3 months ago
1 like
Crazyhorse wrote:
ErnieC wrote:
Gbjbanjs wrote:

As disgusting and abhorent as the October attack was, you need an incredibly narrow view of that situation to justify what Israel have done before and since.

So they should have turned the other cheek? Accepted, shrugged and moved on? Would you have been happy with the UK adopting that approach during the Troubles or was it acceptable then?

The UK decided to negotiate with its sworn enemy the IRA and that brought an end to the Troubles. Or do you think that was also a mistake?

Eventually ...... after many years and after how many civilians killed by the UK?

Avatar
open_roads replied to Gbjbanjs | 3 months ago
2 likes

A good 30-35,000 of the reported deaths can be accounted for exclusively with with the natural death rate (c6,000 a year in previous years) and 30,000 fighters (still leaves 25,000 fighters). The alternate estimate of civilian casualties is as low as 2,500 with many of those purposefully used as human shields by Hamas.

Avatar
Crazyhorse replied to open_roads | 3 months ago
2 likes
open_roads wrote:

A good 30-35,000 of the reported deaths can be accounted for exclusively with with the natural death rate (c6,000 a year in previous years) and 30,000 fighters (still leaves 25,000 fighters). The alternate estimate of civilian casualties is as low as 2,500 with many of those purposefully used as human shields by Hamas.

Actually a recent Lancet study estimates total fatalities as a result of this conflict could be as high as 186,000. That is including the many thousands estimated to have died in agony, alone, trapped in the rubble. See: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(24)01169-3/fulltext#%20

Do you have a source for your estimate of just 2,500 dead please? 

Avatar
Rendel Harris replied to open_roads | 3 months ago
2 likes
open_roads wrote:

A good 30-35,000 of the reported deaths can be accounted for exclusively with with the natural death rate (c6,000 a year in previous years) and 30,000 fighters (still leaves 25,000 fighters). The alternate estimate of civilian casualties is as low as 2,500 with many of those purposefully used as human shields by Hamas.

The reported deaths as of the end of last month were 42,000 as a direct result of Israeli action, they do not include natural deaths. More than 16,000 of those were children and more than 10,000 were women. By your reckoning that must mean at least that 13,500 of the children killed and all of the women were terrorists? The human shield accusation is ludicrous, there are more than two million people in the Gaza strip with a population density equivalent to that of central London. Since the beginning of the current conflict Israel has fired over 50,000 bombs and missiles into this territory, civilian casualties are inevitable and claiming that there are only 2500 is ludicrous. It's simply impossible to carry out such mass bombing in such a densely populated area without killing very substantial numbers of civilians. If you believe that Israel's actions are justified and proportionate that's fine, we can debate that, but simply lying about the results of them doesn't help your case.

Avatar
Crazyhorse replied to john_smith | 3 months ago
3 likes

Er, correct me if I'm wrong but...

Israel has been illegally occupying Palestinian territory since at least 1967 as per subsequent UN Security Council resolutions following the 1967 war demanding an Israeli withdrawal. Israel has illegally occupied Palestinian territory for 57 years - FAR longer than Russia's (current) occupation of parts of Ukraine. In fact, Israel has been forcibly occupying Palestinian territories, including as a result of ethnic cleansing, since 1948 (i.e. for 76 years). Some might call that 'acts of aggression'??

Avatar
Paul J replied to john_smith | 3 months ago
1 like
john_smith wrote:

Some aspects are fairly clear-cut though. Russia was and is the aggressor. Israel was the victim of an appalling, unjustifiable attack last October, and a number of Israelis ars still being held hostage.

Israel is the aggressor. Unless you somehow believe history in Palestine only started on October 7th, 2023. And even if want you believe that, the Israeli response has horrifically over the top and genocidal - unlawful, and a crime against humanity.

One day, Netanyahu, Gallant, Smotrich, Ben-Gvir, and on down to the Sde Teiman celebrity-rapist soldier, et al, will hopefully face justice at Den Haag, and spend the rest of their days in Scheveningen prison.

Where they /won't/ be raped, beaten, put in stress positions and generally tortured; but will get more than enough food and drinks. Unlike the many tens of thousands of innocent Palestinians who Israel puts in prison.

Pages

Latest Comments