The Herald (South Africa)

God made me the way I am, says Caster Semenya

- Nomahlubi Jordaan

CASTER Semenya has fired back at her critics after new regulation­s were released that compel women athletes with high levels of naturally occurring testostero­ne to take medication to reduce them.

The champion athlete took to Twitter and posted a series of defiant quotes after the latest move by the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) to introduce new eligibilit­y regulation­s for females with “difference­s of sexual developmen­t”.

Yesterday Semenya tweeted: “God made me the way I am and I accept myself. I am who I am and I am proud of myself.”

The day before, she wrote: “Opinions aren’t facts. Stop worrying about what people think about you.”

Meanwhile‚ Professor Steve Cornelius has resigned as a member of the IAAF disciplina­ry tribunal in protest against the new rule. According to Team South Africa‚ Cornelius wrote to the IAAF president, citing his reasons.

“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.

“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,” Cornelius wrote.

“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.” – TimesLIVE

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