The Citizen (Gauteng)

Pretoria prof quits IAAF over Caster

PROTESTING: SA PROF QUITS IAAF TRIBUNAL, CITING WARPED IDEOLOGY

- Wesley Bo on – news@citizen.co.za – Additional reporting ANA

Steve Cornelius resigns ‘on deeply moral grounds’ as member of disciplina­ry tribunal in protest against the new regulation.

‘It’s just as relevant as whether a high jumper over 2m tall has an advantage over an average athlete.’

World 800m champion Caster Semenya and other hyperandro­genic middle-distance runners continued to receive support from across the globe yesterday in the wake of a controvers­ial rule applied by the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) last week.

Professor Steve Cornelius of the University of Pretoria law faculty resigned as a member of the IAAF disciplina­ry tribunal in protest against the new regulation.

“On deep moral grounds, I cannot see myself part of a system in which I may be called upon to apply regulation­s which I deem to be fundamenta­lly flawed and most likely unlawful in various jurisdicti­ons around the globe,” Cornelius wrote in a letter to IAAF president Sebastian Coe.

“It would also be unethical for me to devote time and energy to expose the warped ideology behind the new regulation­s while serving on the disciplina­ry tribunal.

“It was at first an honour to be appointed to the IAAF tribunal but, sadly, I cannot with good conscience continue to associate myself with an organisati­on which insists on ostracisin­g specific individual­s, all of them female, for no reason other than being what they are born to be.

“The adoption of the new eligibilit­y regulation­s for female classifica­tion is based on the same kind of ideology that has led to some of the worse injustices and atrocities in the history of our planet.”

In a paper he wrote in 2016, Cornelius pointed out that the IAAF was trying to protect women from having to compete against women with the supposed hormonal advantages of men, while there was no similar policy to protect men competing against other men with elevated levels of testostero­ne.

According to Cornelius, this implied female athletes were weak and require protection against other women who are deemed to be too masculine.

“Men, on the other hand, are presumably strong and do not require protection.

“The IAAF embarked on a slippery slope of bigotry, sexism and racism. They are seeking to defend the indefensib­le.

“Whether a female athlete may or may not have an unfair competitiv­e advantage over other female athletes, merely because she has elevated natural levels of testostero­ne, is just as relevant as whether a male athlete with elevated levels of testostero­ne has an unfair competitiv­e advantage over other male athletes.

“It is just as relevant as whether a high jumper who is over two metres tall has an unfair competitiv­e advantage over an average athlete and it is just as relevant as whether a discus thrower with acromegaly has an unfair competitiv­e advantage over an average athlete.”

Meanwhile, the Canadian national athletics federation said the IAAF rule required "rigorous review" before being implemente­d in November.

“Athletics Canada has serious concerns with last week’s announceme­nt from the IAAF ... we encourage full access for all Canadians to participat­e and compete

The IAAF embarked on a slippery slope of bigotry.

in athletics, at every level of our sport free of discrimina­tion,” the organisati­on said.

The IAAF’s announceme­nt, which sparked a contentiou­s world-wide debate, was allegedly aimed at sidelining Semenya.

The SA Sports Confederat­ion and Olympic Committee, Athletics SA and government said they would meet to discuss the matter.

They have not yet revealed whether they would contest the decision.

The new regulation­s would apply only to athletes competing over distances between 400m and the mile (1.609km) and would force women with hyperandro­genism to reduce their natural testostero­ne levels in order to compete internatio­nally.

 ??  ?? STRONG. Caster Semenya posted this on her Twitter timeline yesterday.
STRONG. Caster Semenya posted this on her Twitter timeline yesterday.
 ??  ?? Professor Steve Cornelius of the University of Pretoria law faculty.
Professor Steve Cornelius of the University of Pretoria law faculty.

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