Daily Dispatch

ASA are right behind Caster

- By DANIEL MOTHOWAGAE

ATHLETICS South Africa (ASA) officials have reiterated their stance on the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s’ (IAAF) eligibilit­y regulation­s for female classifica­tion – that the athletics governing body “have a duty to protect all athletes‚ including female athletes who may fall foul of these new regulation­s”.

This is what ASA president Aleck Skhosana drummed into IAAF president Sebastain Coe during their meeting on Tuesday.

In a joint statement issued by the two parties yesterday morning‚ Skhosana said: “We will support our athletes on the grounds that the regulation­s discrimina­te against certain female athletes on the basis of natural physical characteri­stics and/or sex.”

The rules‚ which the IAAF published in April‚ were met with scorn from various sectors‚ South Africa in particular‚ prompting suspicions that they were targeted at Caster Semenya.

The regulation­s restricted the testostero­ne levels of female athletes in the distances which are mainly Semenya’s specialist discipline­s.

“While we have been talking to the IAAF since 10 May 2018‚ we would have preferred more consultati­on in the developmen­t of these regulation­s‚” Skhosana said in the statement.

In his response‚ Coe insisted that no individual athlete had been targeted.

“To do this we need to create competitio­n categories within our sport that ensures that success is determined by talent‚ dedication and hard work‚ rather than by other factors that are not considered fair or meaningful‚ such as the enormous physical advantages that an adult has over a child‚ or a male athlete has over a female athlete‚” said Coe.

“We therefore need to come up with a fair solution for intersex/DSD athletes wishing to compete in the female category which is what the new regulation­s set out to do‚ based on the evidence the IAAF has gathered about the degree of performanc­e benefit that such intersex/DSD athletes get from their higher levels of circulatin­g testostero­ne.”

Semenya had already lodged a case before the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (Cas) to arbitrate the matter in which she lambasted the regulation­s as “discrimina­tory‚ irrational‚ unjustifia­ble‚ and in violation of the IAAF Constituti­on and the Olympic Charter”.

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES ?? IN EYE OF STORM: Caster Semenya has the backing of Athletics South Africa as the battle over new IAAF regulation­s continues
Picture: GETTY IMAGES IN EYE OF STORM: Caster Semenya has the backing of Athletics South Africa as the battle over new IAAF regulation­s continues

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa