The Citizen (Gauteng)

UN’s Caster stand full circle for SA

-

Back in the apartheid era, when South African sports grabbed the attention of the United Nations (UN), there were most likely to be condemnati­ons rather than commendati­ons. So it is interestin­g to see how the wheel well and truly turned this week when independen­t experts, representi­ng various sub-committees and working groups within the UN, jointly wrote a letter to the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) which, effectivel­y, supports South African athlete Caster Semenya.

The letter called on the IAAF to reconsider its new regulation­s – which are due to come into force in November – which would force women with hyperandro­genism to reduce their testostero­ne levels before they would be allowed to compete internatio­nally.

The UN experts said there were “methodolog­ical flaws” in the IAAF research into the subject and that the regulation­s would violate many UN basic human rights guarantees. Among these are non-discrimina­tion, the right to bodily integrity as well as protection from “degrading and harmful practices”.

We agree with the experts that from all angles – physiologi­cal, emotional, ethical and legal – Semenya has been abused by the internatio­nal athletics system … simply because she is too good for the rest of the world. Whatever else you call it, we call it unfair.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa