Montreal group urges city to bar Israel cycling team from Grand Prix
MONTREAL — A Montreal-based human rights group has asked Mayor Valérie Plante to bar the Israel-Premier Tech cycling team from competing in Sunday’s Grand Prix Cycliste de Montréal amid the war in Gaza, where aid workers say a famine is unfolding.
Palestinian and Jewish Unity, or PAJU, urged the city on Monday to exclude the squad, whose Canadian-Israeli co-owner, Sylvan Adams, has described the riders as ambassadors for Israel. The team has since referred to itself as simply a “professional cycling team” in response to protests.
In its letter to the city, PAJU’s lawyers said it would be “highly harmful and inexplicable” for Israel-Premier Tech to compete in the publicly funded event. The letter cites Israeli human rights groups that have described Israel’s actions in Gaza as genocide.
The group, made up of Jews, Palestinians and other Canadians, said the City of Montreal — a public partner of the race — “exposes itself to a real risk of complicity and whitewashing of these crimes through sport, commonly known as ‘sportswashing.’”
