The Borneo Post

Para athletes ‘ threatened’ for raising concerns over classifica­tion

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LONDON: Para athletes have been threatened with deselectio­n for raising concerns over the classifica­tion of other competitor­s, ex-wheelchair racer Tanni GreyThomps­on told British lawmakers on Tuesday.

The 11- t ime Pa ra lympic champion said the classifica­tion system that underpins Paralympic sport is not “fit for purpose”.

Athletes are placed in categories for competitio­n based on their impairment called sport classes. The system determines which athletes are eligible to compete in a sport and how athletes are grouped together for competitio­n.

Grey-Thompson was speaking as a witness at the House of Commons digital, culture, media and sport ( DCMS) committee hearing into claims British athletes have manipulate­d the process that ensures fair competitio­n in Paralympic sport.

“We need to ask the question whether classifica­tion is fair and transparen­t and whether athletes can make an appeal or complaint in an open and fair process,” she said.

“Judged on what I have been told, I don’t believe we can answer that question right now.”

Grey-Thompson, 48, who now sits in Britain’s second parliament­ary chamber, the House of Lords, said she had heard from athletes and their parents who believed the classifica­tion system was open to abuse and had been abused by other British athletes.

She also said she was placed under “extreme pressure” by “bodies within the system” to find out the details of those allegation­s, which she refused to give as they had come to her under condition of anonymity.

Classi fication campaigner Michael Breen used the example of an athlete with “remitting and relapsing” multiple sclerosis in the T38 class, which he described as the “traditiona­l” home for athletes with cerebral palsy.

Breen told MPs this case was an example of how athletes are currently classified by people without adequate medical ex p e r t i s e , i nt e r nat iona l classifica­tions are sometimes carried out by people of the same nationalit­y as the athlete and “it is all too easy” for national governing bodies to exert influence to make sure certain athletes get the right classifica­tion.

As a result, Breen said athletes with cerebral palsy are being “humiliated” by less disabled compet i tor s and they a re “effectivel­y being pushed out of the sport”.

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