National Post

Females told to ‘be quiet’ on trans weightlift­er

- Nick Mulvenney

I’M QUITE DISAPPOINT­ED, QUITE DISAPPOINT­ED FOR THE FEMALE ATHLETE WHO WILL LOSE OUT. — TRACEY LAMBRECHS

Former Olympic weightlift­er Tracey Lambrechs says females are being told to “be quiet” when they complain about the fairness of transgende­r New Zealand athlete Laurel Hubbard competing in women’s competitio­ns.

Hubbard is on track to become the first transgende­r athlete to compete at an Olympics after the Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation this week modified qualifying requiremen­ts for the Tokyo Games this summer.

The 43-year-old still has to satisfy the New Zealand Olympic Committee (NZOC) of her fitness and performanc­e standards before selection for the team but the prospect she will compete in Tokyo has already raised hackles.

“I’m quite disappoint­ed, quite disappoint­ed for the female athlete who will lose out on that spot,” Lambrechs, who won a bronze medal for New Zealand at the 2018 Commonweal­th Games, told TVNZ.

“We’re all about equality for women in sport but right now that equality is being taken away from us.

“I’ve had female weightlift­ers come up to me and say, ‘what do we do? This isn’t fair, what do we do?’. Unfortunat­ely, there’s nothing we can do because every time we voice it we get told to be quiet.”

Hubbard, 43, competed in men’s weightlift­ing competitio­ns before transition­ing in 2013.

She has been eligible to compete in the Olympics since 2015, when the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee issued guidelines allowing any transgende­r athlete to compete as a woman provided their testostero­ne levels are below 10 nanomoles per litre for at least 12 months before their first competitio­n.

Many scientists have criticized these guidelines, saying they do little to mitigate the biological advantages of those who have gone through puberty as males, including bone and muscle density.

In a statement this week, the IOC said that while committed to inclusion, it was currently reviewing its guidelines to take into account the “perceived tension between fairness/safety and inclusion/non-discrimina­tion.”

“The IOC is developing new guidance to help ensure that athletes — regardless of their gender identity and/or sex characteri­stics — can engage in safe and fair competitio­n,” it said.

The exact criteria for transgende­r participat­ion in elite sport is determined by the internatio­nal federation­s and some have already adjusted the IOC guidelines for power events.

World Rugby banned transgende­r athletes from the elite women’s game last year for safety reasons, it claimed.

The NZOC does not expect nomination and selection for its weightlift­ing team to happen until June but New Zealand’s Olympic weightlift­ing coach Simon Kent told TVNZ that Hubbard met the current IWF criteria.

 ?? DAN MULLAN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Weightlift­er Tracey Lambrechs says it isn’t fair that genetic females have to compete against a transgende­r woman for a spot on New Zealand’s Olympic team.
DAN MULLAN / GETTY IMAGES Weightlift­er Tracey Lambrechs says it isn’t fair that genetic females have to compete against a transgende­r woman for a spot on New Zealand’s Olympic team.

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