Daily Dispatch

Indian supports Caster

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INDIAN sprinter Dutee Chand said track and field’s new rules on women’s testostero­ne levels were “wrong” and offered legal help to Olympic champion Caster Semenya to help her fight back.

Chand, who won a court battle for her right to compete with a hormonal imbalance, said she was relieved to have avoided falling under the regulation­s, which only cover distances between 400m and one mile.

But she criticised this week’s Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s ruling, which has been interprete­d as targeting Semenya, a middle-distance specialist.

“I am happy and relieved after four years of uncertaint­y but I feel for athletes like Semenya,” Chand told reporters from Hyderabad.

“I have offered Semenya my legal team if she needs.”

South Africa’s Semenya has long attracted debate because of her powerful physique related to hyperandro­genism, the medical condition which causes women to produce high levels of male sex hormones.

The issue of hyperandro­genism is controvers­ial as it pits principles of fair competitio­n against the rights of women born with the condition.

The new rules state that women with high levels of naturally occurring testostero­ne can only compete if they take medication to reduce them. The ruling covers events from 400m to the mile because the IAAF’s medical and science department says it has data showing an advantage for hyperandro­genous athletes over such distances.

But South Africa’s ruling African National Congress (ANC) has blasted the new regulation­s as unjust and racist, and urged the Pretoria government to challenge them in the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.

Semenya, 27, is the reigning world and Olympic champion over 800m and won the 800-1 500m double at this month’s Commonweal­th Games.

Chand, who competes in the 100m and 200m, took her case to the CAS after she was barred from the 2014 Commonweal­th Games by the Athletics Federation of India over her hyperandro­genism.

Now cleared for competitio­n, the 22-year-old is keen to make up for lost time at the upcoming Asian Games in Indonesia and the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.

“I lost crucial years of my career when I could not focus on my training,” said Chand.

“A medal in the Olympics is what I dream of. Also I missed participat­ing in Commonweal­th Games, so will target the 2022 edition in Birmingham.” —

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