Caster Semenya loses appeal of testosterone limits
By Nick Said
CAPE TOWN, May 1 (Reuters) – An appeal by Olympic 800-meters champion Caster Semenya was dismissed Wednesday in a case involving regulations to restrict testosterone levels in female athletes.
The Court of Arbitration for Sport ruled the regulations are needed to ensure fair competition. The rules cover track events from 400 meters to a mile.
The case is likely to have wide-reaching consequences, not just for track events but all women’s sport, and has split opinion around the globe.
But while dismissing the appeal, the CAS also voiced concerns about the application of the new International Association of Athletics Federations regulations.
The rules mean Semenya and other athletes with differences in sexual development who are hoping to compete at the World Championships in Doha in September would have to start taking medication within a week to meet the testosterone limit.
“Sometimes it is better to react with no reaction,” Semenya tweeted after the verdict.
Semenya has said she does not wish to undergo medical intervention to change who she is. But her dominance of the middle distances has been labeled unfair by some of her competitors.
Now 28 years old, she was first asked to take a sex-verification test after she won the 800 meters at the IAAF World Championships when she was 18.
The IAAF welcomed Wednesday’s verdict.
“The IAAF … is pleased that the regulations were found to be a necessary, reasonable and proportionate means of achieving the IAAF’s legitimate aim of preserving the integrity of female athletics in the restricted events,” the global governing body said in a statement.
“No athlete will be forced to undergo any assessment and/or treatment under these regulations. It is each athlete’s responsibility, in close consultation with her medical team, to decide whether or not to proceed with any assessment and/or treatment,” it said.
DISCRIMINATORY
However, in the 165-page ruling, the CAS Panel expressed some concerns as to the future practical application of these regulations.
“The Panel found that the DSD regulations are discriminatory, but the majority of the Panel found that, on the basis of the evidence submitted by the parties, such discrimination is a necessary, reasonable and proportionate means of achieving the IAAF’s aim of preserving the integrity of female athletics in the restricted events,” the statement said.
Under the rules, female athletes who have high natural levels of testosterone will have to reduce their levels through medication to under 5 nmol/L. The normal female level is 2 nmol/L.
Testosterone is a hormone that increases muscle mass, strength and hemoglobin – which affects endurance.
The IAAF believes the regulations are necessary to “preserve fair competition in the female category,” and has received support from some current and former athletes.
But the governing body has also come in for criticism from human rights organizations over its wish to medically alter naturally produced levels of testosterone, with the United Nations Human Rights Council adopting a resolution in support of Semenya in March.
The South African will be the most high-profile athlete to be affected by the rules, but others include 2016 Olympic silver medalist in the 800- eters, Francine Niyonsaba of Burundi.
Semenya took potential steps to reinvent her career last week when she won the 5,000 meters at the South African Athletics Championships in a modest time of 16:05.97. That event — more than 3 miles — falls outside the IAAF regulations.
Following the CAS case, other sporting bodies may now choose to set their own parameters for participation by DSD and transgender athletes in their individual codes.
(Reporting By Nick Said; Editing by Christian Radnedge and Janet Lawrence)