Deccan Chronicle

MONTREUIL RACE Champ Semenya heads back to track

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Paris, May 25: Two-time Olympic champion Caster Semenya will run in the 2,000 metres in a meeting held in the Paris suburbs on June 11, the organisers said on Friday.

The race in Montreuil, just east of the French capital, will be the South African’s first since she lost an appeal against Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s rules governing testostero­ne levels in women athletes, which came into effect on May 8.

Semenya has also entered the 3,000m at the Prefontain­e Classic, which this year is being held in Stanford, California, on June 30.

At longer distances Semenya, who won her Olympic golds at 800m, can compete without reducing her testostero­ne levels.

The new rules require women with higher than normal male hormone levels — so-called “hyperandro­genic” athletes -- to artificial­ly lower the amount of testostero­ne in their bodies if they are to compete in races over distances of 400m to the mile.

Semenya won the 800m at the Doha Diamond League meeting this month in her first race since losing her appeal of the controvers­ial IAAF ruling at the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.

Semanya has said she will not take medication but has also said she hopes to defend her 800m at the world championsh­ips in Doha, which start on September 27.

“Hell no. No way,” she said. “I don’t know what will happen next. But no one should tell me what to do, if people want to stop me from doing something that's their problem, not mine.”

She said she was fighting a bigger battle beyond the track. “This is more than a game, more than sports,” she said. “This is about human dignity, human pride.”

The South African government has said it will appeal CAS’s decision in the Swiss courts. The World Medical Associatio­n has urged doctors not to enforce the rules, warning that attempts to do so would breach the ethics codes.

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