The Borneo Post

Semenya renews fight in gender controvers­y

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JOHANNESBU­RG: South African Olympic champion Caster Semenya will go to court to challenge controvers­ial new rules governing female athletes’ testostero­ne levels, her lawyers said on Monday.

The new I nt e r nat iona l As so c i a t i on o f Ath le t i c s Federation­s ( IAAF) policy will target women who natural ly produce unusually high levels of testostero­ne.

Athletes classified as “hyperandro­gyous”, like Semenya, will have to chemically lower their testostero­ne levels to 5 nanomoles per litre of blood to be eligible to run any internatio­nal race of 400 metres up to the mile.

Semenya, a two-time Olympic gold medallist, is expected to bring her case at the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport in Lausanne on Monday, her lawyers Norton Rose Fulbright said in a statement.

She has previously alleged the rules are discrimina­tory and violate the IAAF’s Constituti­on and the Olympic Charter.

Semenya has been at the centre of debate because of her powerful physique, one of the effects of hyperandro­genism which causes those affected to produce high levels of male sex hormones.

The IAAF announced its new rules in April, due to be adopted in November, arguing that hyper-

I just want to run naturally, the way I was born. It is not fair that I am told I must change. It is not fair that people question who I am. I am a woman and I am fast.

androgynou­s competitor­s enjoy an unfair advantage.

“This is a landmark case concerning internatio­nal human rights and discrimina­tion against women athletes with major consequenc­es for gender rights,” said Semenya’s lawyer Gregory Nott.

Semenya, who has undergone several sex tests since her first title in 2009, said the regulation­s were discrimina­tory, offensive and intrusive.

“I just want to run naturally, the way I was born. It is not fair that I am told I must change. It is not fair that people question who I am. I am a woman and I am fast,” Semenya said in the statement.

She was previously suspended for 11 months over her situation. — AFP

Caster Semenya, two-time Olympic gold medallist

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 ??  ?? In this file photo taken on April 13, South Africa’s Caster Semenya celebrates after winning the women’s 800m final during the 2018 Gold Coast Commonweal­th Games at the Carrara Stadium on the Gold Coast. — AFP photo
In this file photo taken on April 13, South Africa’s Caster Semenya celebrates after winning the women’s 800m final during the 2018 Gold Coast Commonweal­th Games at the Carrara Stadium on the Gold Coast. — AFP photo

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