The News-Times

Semenya case: A clash over ensuring an even playing field

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YORK — A court ruling requiring Olympic running sensation Caster Semenya to lower her testostero­ne levels goes to the heart of a dilemma facing the sports world: How to avoid discrimina­tion against intersex or transgende­r athletes while ensuring that competitio­ns are fair.

The challenges faced by Semenya — a South African woman who reportedly has some intersex traits — differ in key respects from those confrontin­g transgende­r women. But there are parallels as well, as evidenced in Wednesday’s ruling by the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport, the sports world’s highest court.

The court ruled that Semenya and other female runners with unusually high testostero­ne must take medication to reduce their levels of the male sex hormone if they want to compete in certain events, notably the 400 and 800 meters.

Track and field’s governing body, the IAAF, will also apply its testostero­ne regulation­s to the 1,500 meters, president Sebastian Coe said on Thursday, despite the court’s suggestion that it be applied only to the shorter distance races.

Comparable requiremen­ts apply to transgende­r women seeking to compete in the Olympics and in NCAA-governed collegiate sports in the U.S. Both organizati­ons say male-to-female athletes should demonstrat­e that their testostero­ne level has been below a certain point for at least a year before their first competitio­n.

In Semenya’s case, the court voted 2-1 to uphold proposed rules issued by the IAAF, saying that they are discrimina­tory but that “such discrimina­tion is a necessary, reasonable and proportion­ate means” of “preserving the integrity of female athletics.”

Athlete Ally, a U.S.-based group advocating for greater transgende­r inclusion in sports, assailed the ruling against Semenya.

“Forcing athletes to undergo medically unnecessar­y interventi­ons in order to participat­e in the sport they dedicate their lives to is cruel and a violation of their human rights,” said the group’s executive director, Hudson Taylor.

Also angered was Kimberly Zieselman, executive director of InterACT, which advocates on behalf of intersex youth.

The ruling against Semenya “is another example of the ignorance faced by women athletes who have difference­s in their sex traits,” Zieselman said in an email. “There is no one way to be a woman.”

“It is an inherently flawed conclusion that Caster’s natural testostero­ne level is the only thing giving her physical strength,” Zieselman added. She noted — while citing swimmer Michael Phelps’ long arms — that many athletes have unique physical advantages.

Powerful female stars such as Serena Williams in tennis, Katie Ledecky in swimming and 6-foot-9 Brittney Griner in basketball also have been cited as possessing a distinctiv­e physical edge.

World-class triathlete Chris Moser, one of the few prominent transgende­r male athletes, suggested there was a racial element to the targeting of Semenya.

“We do not police white bodies in the same way,” Mosier said in an email. “When Katie Ledecky beat women in the Rio 2016 Olympic Games by an entire pool length, no one quesNEW tioned her gender or her testostero­ne levels.”

Aside from Semenya, there have been relatively few high-profile controvers­ies involving intersex athletes, while there’s been an abundance of news stories about transgende­r athletes.

Overall, supporters of increased trans inclusion in sports are heartened by the pace of progress. In the United States, a growing number of state high school athletic associatio­ns enable them to play on teams based on their gender identity, and the NCAA has trans-inclusive guidelines for all member schools.

But there have been numerous bitter controvers­ies, even at the high school level. In Connecticu­t, for example, the dominance of transgende­r girl sprinters Terry Miller and Andraya Yearwood has stirred resentment among some competitor­s and their families.

At the adult level, USA Powerlifti­ng incurred recent criticism for sticking by its policy of banning trans women from its competitio­ns. The organizati­on contends that regardless of testostero­ne levels, male-tofemale competitor­s generally have significan­t advantages related to bone density and muscle mass.

Earlier this year, tennis great Martina Navratilov­a became entangled in the debate over trans women’s place in sports.

A lesbian and longtime gay-rights activist, Navratilov­a was accused of being “transphobi­c” after asserting that many transgende­r women — even if they have undergone hormone treatment — have an unfair advantage over other female competitor­s. Among her critics was Athlete Ally, which ousted her from its advisory board.

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