Bangkok Post

IAAF claims Olympic champion Semenya is ‘biological­ly male’

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LAUSANNE: The governing body of track argued in court that Olympic champion Caster Semenya is “biological­ly male” and that is the reason she should reduce her natural testostero­ne to be allowed to compete in female competitio­ns, according to documents released publicly for the first time on Tuesday and which provide new insight into a bitter legal battle.

The documents released by sport’s highest court show that Semenya responded by telling the judges that being described as biological­ly male “hurts more than I can put in words.” The 28-year-old South African runner said she was unable to express how insulted she felt at the IAAF “telling me that I am not a woman.”

The IAAF’s stance on Semenya and other female athletes affected by its new testostero­ne regulation­s — and Semenya’s outrage at the biological male claim — was revealed in a 163-page decision published by the Switzerlan­d-based Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport. It details parts of the courtroom exchanges that were held behind closed doors when Semenya challenged the IAAF over the highly contentiou­s hormone rules in a five-day hearing in February. CAS had previously released only short excerpts of the final verdict when it was announced last month.

Tuesday’s fuller court records, which were still redacted, show the IAAF referred to the two-time Olympic and three-time world champion as one of a number of “biological­ly male athletes with female gender identities.”

Arguing that Semenya and others like her should be subject to its hormone limits to ensure fairness in female competitio­ns, the IAAF stated: “There are some contexts where biology has to trump identity.”

Semenya was legally identified as female at birth and has identified as female her whole life. But the IAAF says she is one of a number of female runners in elite athletics who have medical conditions known as “difference­s of sex developmen­t’’ and who were born with the typical male XY chromosome pattern. That gives them some male biological characteri­stics, male levels of the hormone testostero­ne after puberty, and an unfair athletic advantage over other female athletes, the IAAF says.

Semenya, who has been fighting the IAAF ever since she was embroiled in a gender verificati­on test at the world championsh­ips 10 years ago, says the rules should be discarded and she should be allowed to run in her natural form.

 ?? AFP ?? Olympic champion Caster Semenya.
AFP Olympic champion Caster Semenya.

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