Track athlete
Caster Semenya has lost an appeal against a rule that would force her to
artificially lower her testosterone levels in order to compete at next year’s
Olympic games.
“I am very
disappointed,” she said. “I refuse to let World Athletics drug me or stop me
from being who I am.”
The South
African 29-year-old has been involved in legal fights to participate in women’s
sports for years. She is a cisgender woman – she was assigned female at birth
and she identifies as a woman – and an intersex condition means that she has
high levels of testosterone in her body.
World
Athletics, the body that regulates international track and field competitions
formerly known as the IAAF, issued
a rule in 2019 requiring participants in the women’s 400-meter,
800-meter, and 1500-meter races to have a low level of testosterone in their
bodies and to undergo six months of hormone therapy if their natural
testosterone levels are high.
Since those
are the three races that Semenya competes in, she has speculated that the rule
was made just to exclude her.
She challenged
the rule to the Court of Arbitration for Sport but lost last year. She then
appealed to the Swiss Supreme Court, which temporarily blocked the lower
court’s ruling but then upheld it.
Semenya’s lawyers argued that
her intersex condition is just one of many genetic variances that athletes can
have, and women with other “genetic gifts” aren’t forced into medical treatment
to remove them in order to compete.
“Women with
differences in sexual development have genetic variations that are no different
than other genetic variations in sport,” the lawyers argued.
Semenya won
the 800-meter race at the 2012 and 2016 Olympic games but she will not be
allowed to defend her title under the current World Athletics rules because she
“does not wish to undergo medical intervention to change who she is and how she
was born.”
“Excluding
female athletes or endangering our health solely because of our natural
abilities puts World Athletics on the wrong side of history,” she said.
“I will
continue to fight for the human rights of female athletes, both on the track
and off the track, until we can all run free the way we were born. I know what
is right and will do all I can to protect basic human rights, for young girls
everywhere.”
World
Athletics welcomed the ruling saying that the organization has “fought for and
defended equal rights and opportunities for all women and girls in our sport
today and in the future.”
SOURCE: LGBTQ NATION
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