The HSBC documents reveal that Sylvan Adams was the beneficial owner of an account with a staggering balance: over $800 million US. That account was in the name of "Summit International Bank," a private bank formed by the Adams family in Barbados in 2006. Their bank’s website says it was "founded to manage the wealth of a Canadian family," but without disclosing the name.
According to Summit’s web site, the bank holds assets of over $1 billion and offers its wealth management services "to a select group of wealthy families, individuals and institutions."
Israelis are now turning their attention to a new kind of construction: image. Despite the occupation and condemnation from the international community, Israel is ready to project its pride at what it has built and paint over the canvas of conflict. Holding the brush is Sylvan Adams, an ebullient 58-year-old property billionaire who emigrated from Canada in 2016.
“‘Normal Israel’ is the phrase that I’ve coined; it’s the regular daily life which somehow is not an interesting enough story to be told to the rest of the world. All they want to do is talk about conflict and terrorism but that’s a very, very small part of life in Israel,” he says.
Adams’s subject is cosmopolitan Israel: a charming country of ancient heritage and modern cities, of warm seas and warm people. Next May his chosen colour will be pink, synonymous with the Giro d’Italia, in his position as honorary president of the organising committee of the race’s ‘Big Start’ in Jerusalem.
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Yet calls for a boycott will remain until next May, with the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement claiming the event represents a “sports-washing of Israel’s occupation and apartheid”.
“Starting the Giro in Israel to all intents rewards Israel for its decades-long human rights abuses against the Palestinian people, including athletes,” says Sharaf Qutaifan of the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel.
Organisers and ministers from here and Italy responded in unison that they would be in Israel to “do sport, not politics”, but as they huddled together behind the Giro’s Trofeo Senza Fine, the trophy without end, the absence of Palestinian faces in the room laid the politics of this event bare.
No amount of pomp, pink and “Normal Israel” can hide it.
no official word about that yet. No clue.Mayomaniac said:Eshnar, is the rumour about the delayed presentation true?
If Jafferau has Finestre and Sestriere before it (as rumoured), it's hardly a one climb stage...OlavEH said:Shi*, another disappointing route. Montevergine is boring. "One climb stages" like Jaffrau and Pratonevoso. No proper Dolomite stage. The only hope here is for a good Zoncolan stage and that the classification forces GC contenders to attack early (on Saint Panthaleon) on the Cervinia stage.
Btw: any rumours about some proper medium mountain stages?
Eshnar said:If Jafferau has Finestre and Sestriere before it (as rumoured), it's hardly a one climb stage...
Medium mountain stages likely stage 9, 10 (with hilltop finish), Imola if it is there, Filottrano if it is there, the one in Veneto too, probably. But no details yet.
what else can it possibly be?OlavEH said:Btw, what's the reason for all the stages in the Aosta and Piemonte (and French) mountains the last years? Someone who's paying for it?
I think those roads would need to be resurfaced, and with the main road being available I don't think anybody has any interest in paying for doing so.Maaaaaaaarten said:Can't they climb the Montevergine massif from a different road for a change? On the map it looks like there are several routes possible. Using a different route there would be a bunch of flat before reaching the Santuario, but that shouldn't be a problem. Some of the roads look a bit narrow and not in a great condition, but they look passable with maybe a bit of patching up. The roads going up further to the north look a bit steeper than the one we always get now.
I don't think there are any other reasons.mikii4567 said:Do we know if there's any particular reason why, other than potential problems with stage city deals (like Rome)? I don't think we've really been this unsure about the exact route on this day before... (then again, I haven't been following these threads for that long)
me too... without a doubt, il giro is the most beautiful race in the worldValv.Piti said:The route isn't even published and yet the Giro is still managing to be very underwhelming. I had looked forward to the route presentation, its one of my favourite things on the cycling calendar.![]()
Not reallyhazaran said:So we're going to have the Tour presentation before the Giro? Surely not, organizing the Tour is 100x the difficulty.