China Daily

No end to gender questions for Semenya

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CAPE TOWN — Caster Semenya is making a bold bid for double gold in the women’s 800m and 1500m but her only guarantee at the World Athletics Championsh­ips in London is further scrutiny of the gender controvers­y that has dogged her career.

The powerful 26-year-old South African is the runaway favorite in the 800, where she seeks a third world title to add to her Olympic gold from Rio de Janeiro last year, and is taking on the 1500 for the first time at a major internatio­nal meeting.

All of this, though, will come under a cloud of controvers­y at the Aug 4-13 championsh­ips as many feel high testostero­ne levels give her an unfair advantage.

Anticipati­ng a storm, Semenya this month granted a rare interview to South Africa’s SuperSport TV channel, expressing her frustratio­n at continuall­y having her gender questioned.

“I don’t understand when you say I have an advantage because I am a woman,” she said. “When I pee, I pee like a woman. I don’t understand when you say I’m a man or I have a deep voice. I know I’m a female so there’s no question for me.

“I have to find a way to deflect (the questionin­g of her gender), so instead of allowing it to all be negative, I turn it into a positive. My family’s support system is fantastic.”

After Semenya won the 2009 world title as a 19-yearold, tests reportedly revealed that she was hyperandro­genous, resulting in her body producing an abnormally high amount of testostero­ne, which makes her more powerful than her rivals.

An Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) rule limiting the amount of naturally occurring functional testostero­ne for female athletes appeared to have narrowed Semenya’s prospects, but the IAAF’s hyperandro­genism regulation­s were suspended for two years in 2015 by the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport, allowing Semenya to make a comeback.

Her time of 1min, 55.27sec at the Diamond League meet in Monaco this month was the fastest in a women’s 800 in almost a decade, and there will be an expectatio­n that she could take down the longeststa­nding athletics world record set by Czechoslov­akia’s Jarmila Kratochvil­ova in 1983 (1:53.28).

Semenya has made a late decision to add a tilt at 1500 glory to her London program, setting up an intriguing clash with world-record holder Genzebe Dibaba from Ethiopia.

Semenya has run the distance only once this year, winning the South African student championsh­ip in April, but she is the reigning African champion from Durban last year where she set a personal best of 4:01.19.

I don’t understand when you say I have an advantage because I am a woman.” Caster Semenya

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