Bangkok Post

Court slams trans athletes as Open recognitio­n looms

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MELBOURNE: Australian tennis great Margaret Court has again condemned transgende­r athletes, while claiming the devil controlled the media and government, in fiery comments just weeks before she is honoured at the Australian Open.

The 24-time Grand Slam singles winner, now a church pastor, drew fire in 2017 for saying she would avoid Qantas over the airline’s support for same-sex marriage, which is now law in Australia following a referendum.

She later claimed, in comments that were widely derided, that tennis was “full of lesbians” and that transgende­r children were the result of a Nazistyle “plot” to brainwash the minds of young people.

The 77-year-old doubled down on her controvers­ial views regarding sexuality during a sermon at her Perth church at the weekend, which came to light yesterday.

“Children are making the decision at seven or eight years of age to change their sex... no, just read the first two chapters of Genesis, that’s all I say. Male and female,” Court said in a video of the sermon.

“It’s so wrong at that age because a lot of things are planted in this thought realm at that age, and they start to question ‘what am I.’

“And you know with that LGBT, they will wish they never put the T on the end of it because, particular­ly in women’s sports, they’re going to have so many problems.

“You have got young people taking hormones and having changes, by the time they are 17 they are thinking, ‘Now I’m a boy and really I was a girl.’ Because you know what, God made us that way.”

Court also highlighte­d the difficulty of talking about her religious beliefs, claiming “the devil” had control over the media and government.

“The devil gets in and the media and the political, the education, TV — he wants to control a nation so he can affect people’s minds and mouths,” she said.

After her previous comments on homosexual­ity and gay marriage, highprofil­e players like Billie Jean King and Martina Navratilov­a called for the Margaret Court Arena at Melbourne Park — home of the Australian Open — to be stripped of her name.

That has not happened and the 50th anniversar­y of Court’s calendar-year Grand Slam will next month be commemorat­ed at the tournament, where she will be a guest of honour.

Court used to attend the Australian Open regularly but hasn’t shown up since 2017, when the controvers­y over her views first flared.

 ?? AFP ?? Margaret Court poses with winner Victoria Azarenka and runner-up Li Na after the 2013 Australian Open final.
AFP Margaret Court poses with winner Victoria Azarenka and runner-up Li Na after the 2013 Australian Open final.

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