Malta Independent

Lawyer: Semenya to go to European Court of Human Rights

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Caster Semenya's lawyer said Tuesday they will take her case to the European Court of Human Rights in what's likely to be a last-ditch legal challenge against regulation­s that require the South African and some other female athletes to artificial­ly lower their natural testostero­ne levels to compete.

Greg Nott, who has represente­d Semenya for more than a decade, gave no timeframe for their challenge at the Strasbourg, France-based court, but it's unlikely there would be a resolution before the Tokyo Olympics next summer.

Semenya, the two-time Olympic champion in the 800 meters, has twice lost legal appeals against World Athletics' highly contentiou­s testostero­ne limits, first at sport's highest court in Switzerlan­d in 2019 by a 2-1 majority of the judges, and then at the Swiss supreme court in September.

The rules require female athletes with conditions called difference­s of sex developmen­t that lead to high natural testostero­ne to lower it to below a specific level through birth control pills, hormone-blocking injections or surgery to be allowed to compete. The rules apply to track events with distances from 400 meters to the mile. Athletes must show their levels are below the threshold for at least six months before competing at top events like the Olympics, world championsh­ips, or Diamond League meets.

World Athletics argues the high testostero­ne gives Semenya and others an unfair advantage over athletes with testostero­ne in the typical female range.

The 29-year-old Semenya has refused to take medication to alter what she refers to as her natural gifts and hasn't been allowed to compete in her favored two-lap race since June last year. She has said she will try to compete at next year's Tokyo Olympics in the 200 meters, which doesn't fall under the rules, but it's uncertain if she will be able to qualify in a race she has little experience in.

Nott's statement said there had been "growing support" for Semenya's cause "from institutio­ns and bodies across the globe." He said all of Africa's human rights commission­s had now expressed support for Semenya following a previous announceme­nt by the UN Human Rights Council backing Semenya last year.

"We remain hopeful that World Athletics will see the error it has made and reverse the prohibitiv­e rules," Nott said.

While Semenya says she is being discrimina­ted against, the issue is perhaps one of the most complex faced by profession­al sports and has developed into a bitter legal battle.

World Athletics said in the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport hearing in 2019 that Semenya had XY chromosome­s, the typical male pattern, and was one of a number of "biological­ly male athletes with female gender identities." The track federation said the testostero­ne reduction was a form of compromise to allow her to continue competing against female athletes.

Semenya's camp was outraged by the claim that she was biological­ly male, and she said she was insulted at the track federation "telling me that I am not a woman." She was legally identified as female at birth and has identified as female her entire life.

Semenya is not the only athlete affected by the rules. Two other African runners, Francine Niyonsaba of Burundi and Margaret Wambui of Kenya, have said they are also affected and World Athletics says there are others but won't name them because of medical confidenti­ality. Niyonsaba claimed silver behind Semenya at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics and Wambui won bronze in that race.

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