The Daily Courier

No ban on transgende­r athletes

- By The Associated Press

CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Track and field’s governing body is facing renewed criticism for a proposal to allow transgende­r athletes to continue competing in top female events, although with stricter rules.

World Athletics has sent a proposal for new regulation­s governing transgende­r athletes – and the separate issue of athletes with difference­s in sex developmen­t like two-time Olympic champion Caster Semenya – to national track federation­s for their feedback.

The governing body’s “preferred option,” it said in a statement this week, is for transgende­r athletes and those with sex developmen­t difference­s to still be allowed to compete in female events if they reduce their testostero­ne levels further, to below 2.5 nanomoles per liter of blood.

They would have to keep their testostero­ne below that level for at least two years before being allowed to compete, according to World Athletics’ proposal.

Transgende­r athletes are currently clear to enter elite female events if they have kept their testostero­ne levels below 5 nanomoles for at least a year. Athletes with sex developmen­t difference­s who also have testostero­ne levels higher than the typical female range have to be below 5 nanomoles for six months before competing.

Although WA is proposing to tighten its regulation­s, it had been expected to consider a complete ban for transgende­r athletes in female events following swimming’s decision to do that last year.

World swimming body FINA’s decision, which bans transgende­r athletes who have experience­d any part of male puberty from competing against women, was supported at the time by World Athletics president Sebastian Coe.

Track’s proposal to still allow transgende­r athletes was criticized by some, including British shot putter Amelia Strickler, who said transgende­r athletes had a clear advantage in her event.

“The fact that World Athletics, one of the biggest, has not (put) its foot down, I think it is really, really upsetting,” Strickler told The Telegraph newspaper. “I am genuinely worried. This is my career ... I think these rules really could open the floodgates. If I get social media backlash, I don’t really care.”

Others have argued that sports needs to find a way to include transgende­r athletes. There are currently no openly transgende­r athletes in either elite track and field or swimming.

The inclusion of transgende­r athletes and those with sex developmen­t difference­s is one of sport’s most contentiou­s and emotive topics, and track and field has been wrestling with how to formally deal with it for more than a decade.

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