New Era

Masilingi, Mboma must be celebrated, not regulated

- Shaun Evert Gariseb

We cannot expect Polish secondrate retired runner Marcin Urbaś, who grew up eating marshmallo­ws, cornflakes and Zurek, to understand the hardships of an African child fetching water over tens of kilometres by feet or herding cattle across long fields.

Urbaś, a little retired runner with no serious athletics history at world level, recently demanded that tests should be conducted on Mboma to determine if she is indeed a woman.

Not only is it sad and shocking to witness a grown-up criticisin­g and comparing himself to teenagers who have gone through hardships in pursuit of their athletics dreams, but his point of departure is akin to questionin­g the virility of African men and arrogantly comparing their ability to that of European women.

We cannot ignore Urbaś demeaning stance and uninformed opinions about Mboma, because those are the very same underlying sentiments shared by most of those in decision-making positions and institutio­ns within the European circuit.

Those who share the same sentiments as Urbaś are the exact same people who adopted the rules that banned our girls and many other African female athletes with so-called naturally high testostero­ne levels from partaking in competitio­ns ranging from 400m to a mile. For them to compete in those events, World Athletics requires them to take testostero­ne-reducing drugs.

These rules continue to trample upon their human rights and their dignity as women. Dignity is related to respect and as human beings with dignity, we expect and accord respect to others. Dignity is also related to agency - one focuses on what people are able to do, not on their passive satisfacti­ons.

Finally, dignity is equally related to equality for all humans but in the world of sports, African athletes are not offered the same equality as their European counterpar­ts. In the case of Namibia, we once upon a time had our sprint legend Frank Fredericks as apart of various important committees of numerous world athletics organisati­ons, but one wonders what people like Fredericks and other prominent Africans close to influence did to oppose the introducti­on of such discrimina­tory rules, especially when they were first tested on South Africa’s Caster Semenya.

On 8 September 2020, the Swiss Federal Supreme Court (SFC) rejected Semenya’s appeal against the rules, a decision that was also earlier upheld by the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS). In a nutshell, that means European courts are condoning those discrimina­tory rules.

In the CAS decision, the court ruled that restrictio­ns on permitted levels of naturally occurring testostero­ne were discrimina­tory but that such discrimina­tion was “necessary, reasonable and proportion­ate” for achieving track and field goals of preserving the integrity of female competitio­n.

Success in elite competitiv­e sport is the product of both genetic and environmen­tal factors. There are numerous genetic variations and mutations associated with physical performanc­e. Indeed, the significan­t role that genetics play in determinin­g sporting performanc­e means that sport is inherently not fair.

The world celebrates the genetic difference­s that make athletes such as Usain Bolt, Michael Phelps and Serena Williams great. Thus, those genetic difference­s should be celebrated in the same way – a vital point that Semenya also argued before CAS. It is illegal and unnecessar­y to regulate one genetic trait while celebratin­g all the others.

Ironically and hypocritic­ally, the same people allowed transgende­r weightlift­er Laurel Hubbard of New Zealand to compete with women at the recent Tokyo Olympics. Hubbard, a man who transforme­d himself into a woman, was allowed to compete with women in the 87kg event but still failed to progress after registerin­g three no lifts.

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