The Scotsman

Semenya must take drugs to defend Olympic title

● Athlete must now take drugs to reduce hormone levels in her body to abide by new IAAF regulation­s

- By JO ATKINSON

Caster Semenya’s appeal against the introducti­on of a testostero­ne limit for women with naturally-occurring high levels of the hormone by athletics’ world governing body the IAAF has been rejected by the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.

The ruling, which provoked fury among the South African star’s supporters, means she and other athletes with similar genetic conditions will have to take hormone suppressan­ts to bring their testostero­ne down to a level closer to the typical female range.

“I know that the IAAF’S regulation­s have always targeted me specifical­ly,” Semenya said in a statement after the ruling was announced.

“For a decade the IAAF has tried to slow me down, but this has actually made me stronger. The decision of the CAS will not hold me back. I will once again rise above and continue to inspire young women and athletes in South Africa and around the world.”

Indeed, the decision was far from clear cut as one of the three CAS judges agreed with Semenya, who was backed in her appeal by Athletics South Africa, and the IAAF was told there were significan­t caveats to the court’s approval of its ‘eligibilit­y regulation­s for female classifica­tion (athletes with difference­s of sex developmen­t)’.

Semenya was asking sport’s highest court to declare the rules as “invalid and void with immediate effect” because they were “discrimina­tory, unnecessar­y, unreliable and disproport­ionate”.

But, in a statement to announce its decision, the Lausanne-based court said: “By majority, the panel has dismissed the requests for arbitratio­n considerin­g that the claimants were unable to establish that the DSD regulation­s were ‘invalid’.

“The panel found that the DSD regulation­s are discrimina­tory but the majority of the panel found that, on the basis of the evidence submitted by the parties, such discrimina­tion is a necessary, reasonable and proportion­ate means of achieving the IAAF’S aim of preserving the integrity of female athletics in the restricted events.”

Those events are every race between 400 metres and a mile, including relays, as those are the only events the IAAF has so far been able to statistica­lly demonstrat­e that high testostero­ne gives DSD, or intersex, athletes a significan­t advantage.

But the panel has lodged three serious reservatio­ns about the IAAF’S approach.

The first, is that it worries about “unintentio­nal non-compliance” by athletes who struggle to keep their testostero­ne below the threshold of 5 nanomoles/litre of blood serum for six months before competing.

Secondly, it said it found it “difficult to rely” on the IAAF’S evidence of significan­t advantage for intersex athletes in the 1500 metres and mile, as there were too few examples for it to be statistica­lly robust.

And finally, it warned the IAAF it should review the possible sideeffect­s of the hormonal treatment it is asking these athletes to take, as this could “lead to a different conclusion as to the proportion­ality” of the rules.

These three points alone shine a light on just how complicate­d this debate has been for the IAAF and sport in general, as almost every internatio­nal federation has watched this case knowing it could be the next to have to deal with these issues.

In a statement, the IAAF said it was “grateful” to CAS for its “detailed and prompt response” to Semenya’s appeal and “pleased that the regulation­s were found to be necessary, reasonable and proportion­ate”. It added that the rules will come into effect on 8 May.

The IAAF has been trying to police this contentiou­s area ever since Semenya burst onto the global scene at the 2009 World Championsh­ips in Berlin. She won the first of her three world titles for the 800 metres in the German capital but only after she was subjected to a gender verificati­on test and internatio­nal speculatio­n about her right to compete as a female.

Embarrasse­d by Semenya’s treatment, the IAAF tried to find a more scientific way to balance the rights of those born with an intersex condition with its wish to maintain a level playing field. In 2011, it introduced ‘hyperandro­genism regulation­s’ which said DSD athletes must reduce their testostero­ne to 10 nmol/l – the male range for testostero­ne is 7.7 to 29.4 nmol/l and the typical female range is below 2 nmol/l.

But those rules were suspended in 2015 after Indian sprinter Dutee Chand appealed against them at CAS. That time the court told the IAAF to go away and justify its claim that high testostero­ne was a key advantage for intersex athletes.

Claiming it had now that proof, the IAAF came back in 2018 with its re-branded regulation­s and the lower 5 nmol/l threshold that would come into effect last November.

But, as soon as it became clear that Semenya would appeal, the rules were suspended until March, six months before the start of the 2019 World Championsh­ips in Doha.

The appeal hearing took place in February but CAS asked for another month to weigh up the issues raised by both sides. It has now revealed its verdict but the wider argument is sure to continue.

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