The Guardian (USA)

Francine Niyonsaba becomes first athlete with DSD to break world record

- Sean Ingle

Track and field history was made in Zagreb on Tuesday night as Francine Niyonsaba became the first athlete who has identified herself as having a difference of sex developmen­t (DSD) to officially break a world record.

The Burundian did it in style, shattering the old 2,000m best by more than two seconds as she crossed the line in 5:21.26. While the 2,000m is not run frequently, Niyonsaba’s performanc­e will inevitably reignite the debate over athletes with DSDs, given they are barred from competing internatio­nally between 400m and 1600m unless they take medication to reduce their high testostero­ne.

Niyonsaba, who won the silver medal over 800m at the 2016 Rio Olympics before moving up in distance due to the World Athletics rules, has had an astonishin­g year – winning the Diamond League title at 5,000m and running the fifth-fastest outdoor 3,000m time ever.

But in Croatia she produced the cherry on the cake. Going through halfway in 2:41.37 put Niyonsaba on pace to break the world record of 5:23.75, set indoors by Ethiopia’s Genzebe Dibaba in 2017. The 28-year-old then powered to glory with a final lap of 63 seconds to break the record.

While Niyonsaba is a popular athlete, others in the sport including the two-times 400m Olympic champion Shaunae Miller-Uibo have questioned why World Athletics does not extend its rules regarding DSDs to other events.

In 2019, the court of arbitratio­n for sport (Cas) ruled that 46 XY DSD athletes “enjoy a significan­t sporting advantage … over 46 XX athletes without such DSD” due to their biology.

Cas added: “Individual­s with 5-ARD have what is commonly identified as the male chromosoma­l sex (XY and not XX), male gonads (testes not ovaries) and levels of circulatin­g testostero­ne in the male range (7.7-29.4 nmol/L), which are significan­tly higher than the female range (0.06-1.68 nmol/L).”

 ?? Zagreb. Photograph: Maja Hitij/Getty Images ?? Francine Niyonsaba, pictured after winning the Diamond League women’s 5,000m in Zurich, has seta new world record in the 2,000m in
Zagreb. Photograph: Maja Hitij/Getty Images Francine Niyonsaba, pictured after winning the Diamond League women’s 5,000m in Zurich, has seta new world record in the 2,000m in

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