Vuelta director vows cycling race to go ahead after latest anti-Israel disruption

After pro-Palestinian protesters against Israel forced a premature end to yet another stage of the Vuelta a Espana on Tuesday, race director Javier Guillen said the intention is to finish the race in Madrid on Sunday as planned and called the disruptions illegal.

Stage 16 ended 8 kilometers before the finish after a large protest blocked the road 3 kilometers from the scheduled stage end, similar to stage 11 when riders had to finish 3 kilometers from the line due to protesters causing disruption at the finish in Bilbao.

“I’m here before you because, from La Vuelta, we want to clearly express our strongest rejection of what we experienced today,” Guillen told reporters.

“Fortunately, the stage was completed in terms of timing and the stage winner but, obviously, the stage did not end where we had planned.

“The main message I want to share with you today is that we are going to continue with La Vuelta, and tomorrow we will start the next stage.”

The focus of the protests has been the presence of the Israel-Premier Tech team at the Vuelta, with the demonstrators opposed to Israel over its ongoing war in Gaza against Hamas.

The first disruption came during stage five’s team time trial when the Israel-Premier Tech team were stopped on the road by protesters holding Palestinian flags.

Since then, riders have crashed because of protesters’ actions and, while Israel-Premier Tech removed their name from the riders’ jerseys on Saturday, Tuesday’s events show that this has had no effect on the protesters.

Videos on social media showed them attempting to block the road, with Spanish police trying to push them back and dragging some away.

“Complicit… get out of here,” protestors chanted at police.

“You cannot cut stages short, you cannot block the cyclists’ path,” Guillen said.

“It’s illegal because it’s defined as such both in the Penal Code and in the Sports Law. We are a sport and sport is meant to unite, anything that doesn’t serve that purpose isn’t linked to sport.

“We want to defend our sport, we want to defend our race, and that’s why we want to keep working.”

No suspension

There have been calls to suspend the Israel-Premier Tech team from the race, but Guillen reiterated the Vuelta’s stance that this is a decision which is out of the organizers’ hands.

“Yesterday, there was a match between Italy and Israel. A football match was played, and a European Cup in which Israel participated has taken place,” Guillen said following Monday’s soccer World Cup qualifier played in Hungary.

“The participation of these teams is not prohibited because no international federation has done so, none. And there hasn’t been any international body that has imposed sanctions requiring us, the world of sport, to act accordingly.

“From now on, what we want is for the race to continue because all the teams participating in La Vuelta have legitimacy.”

Director of La Vuelta, Javier Guillen (C) speaks flanked by sports journalists, former cyclist Pedro Delgado (L) and Carlos de Andres, during the presentation of the 76th edition of La Vuelta cycling tour of Spain, in Burgos on February 11, 2021. (Cesar Manso/AFP)

Guillen said the Vuelta is deploying every possible resource when it comes to security, but it is impossible to cover every area in a race of this size. The director was asked if a Plan B was in place for Sunday’s final stage.

“No Plan B for reaching Madrid, no replacing the Madrid stage, absolutely not,” Guillen replied.

Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.


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