The Mail on Sunday

Now girl gymnasts have to share changing rooms with boys who identify as female

- By Sanchez Manning SOCIAL AFFAIRS CORRESPOND­ENT

FEMALE gymnasts of all ages at thousands of British clubs must now use the same changing facilities and toilets as males who identify as female, following a ruling by the sport’s governing body.

Women and girls travelling to official competitio­ns have also been told they must share accommodat­ion with boys and men who identify as female. Controvers­ially, the edict by British Gymnastics, which has a membership of more than 350,000 – the vast majority of whom are under 16 – bans coaches from telling parents their daughter is sharing a room with a boy who has declared themself as female.

It adds that anyone ‘unhappy’ with the new rules must make their own ‘alternativ­e arrangemen­ts’. It is unclear whether males who identify as females will be allowed to share showers with female gymnasts.

There has been a furious backlash from parents, who say the organis at i on’s t r ansgender poli cy – i ntroduced after advice from transgende­r campaigner­s – puts their daughters’ safety at risk.

In a further ruling, boys and men who identify as female are allowed to participat­e in femaleonly competitio­ns.

Prepubesce­nt boys who identify as girls can compete in any female category. Male gymnasts who iden- tify as female but are post-puberty can take part in women’s competitiv­e events, providing they comply with Internatio­nal Olympic Committee standards.

IOC rules stipulate that to be eligible for female sporting competitio­ns, trans women must live in their ‘declared gender’ for a minimum of four years. They must also demonstrat­e they are taking hormone treatment which suppresses their testostero­ne to a specified level for 12 months before and throughout the competitio­n.

The British Gymnastics guidance has been sent to thousands of affiliated clubs, prompting dozens of complaints from parents. One mother from Oxfordshir­e told The Mail on Sunday she was ‘horrified’ when she was sent the policy by her nine-year-old daughter’s coach.

The woman, who asked to be referred to only as Tracy, said: ‘When I phoned British Gymnastics, the receptioni­st told me that they had been inundated by phone calls from unhappy parents.

‘ The fact that boys are now allowed to change with the girls is a safeguardi­ng nightmare. I’m not happy about this at all and nor is my daughter.

‘When I spoke to the other parents at the club, they couldn’t believe a sporting body would put children at risk in that way.’

Tracy said she was equally upset that her daughter might be sharing a room with a boy who identifies as a girl while travelling with her club for competitio­ns.

‘I may not be on that trip because she goes with her club and I’m utterly horrified my child could be changing and sleeping in the same room as boys,’ she said. ‘ Even worse, I wouldn’t be told to protect the privacy of the trans child.’

Another mother, from Cambridges­hire, who also declined to be named, said she will not encourage her ‘talented’ daughter to progress to competitio­n level for ‘her own safety’. The row comes as a string of elite athletes, including Martina Navratilov­a, Sharron Davies and Dame Kelly Holmes, have spoken out against transgende­r women competing in female sports.

Former Wimbledon champion Navratilov­a says it is ‘unfair’ for women to compete against athletes who are biological­ly ‘still men’.

British Gymnastics said l ast night: ‘We believe our guidance on the inclusion of trans people is consistent with our safeguardi­ng policies and have no reason to believe that it compromise­s anyone’s safety or welfare.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom