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Drunks break up Semanya meeting
By Mike Hurst From: The Daily Telegraph October 05, 2009 9:12PM Increase Text SizeDecrease Text SizePrintEmail Share
Add to DiggAdd to del.icio.usAdd to FacebookAdd to KwoffAdd to MyspaceAdd to NewsvineWhat are these? Scandal…Caster Semanya. Source: The Daily Telegraph
A DRUNKEN mob yesterday broke up a meeting in Pretoria of international athletes discussing the disastrous style of management at Athletics South Africa.
The chaotic disruption, allegedly led by ASA board member Hendrick Mokganyetsi, left athletes fearing their representative careers might be terminated, according to a text message sent by one of the elite athletes in the meeting.
The text, which The Daily Telegraph has received, in part reads: "We just had an athletics meeting so that we as individual athletes can have our say about the whole (Caster Semenya) 800m scandal and about ASA management.
"There was one member of ASA at the meeting and he accused the meeting for (sic) being racist, but then he saw the majority in meeting was black.
"Then after all the athletes raised their concerns, there came a lot of non-athletes into the meeting. They disrupted just when we want to come to conclusions about what we gonna do. They stood up shouting, screaming, dancing … until everyone left. I feel so sad and tired now.
"What are we supposed to do?
"I hope this doesn’t mean the end of all our careers.’’
The athletes’ meeting was called by former Olympians Geraldine Pillay and Arnaud Malherbe following the confession of ASA president Leonard Chuene on September 19 that he lied when he repeatedly declared no gender verification tests had been conducted on sexually ambiguous Semenya before she won the women’s 800m world championship in Berlin in August.
South African athletics has been in chaos since The Daily Telegraph revealed on September 11 that Semenya was an hermaphrodite, and that ASA covered up sex tests it ordered to be conducted on her on August 7 in Pretoria before her controversial win.
In a related matter, the meeting expressed concerns that both of ASA’s major sponsors, Yellow Pages and Nedbank, have ended their support of ASA events, rendering the operations of the sport dependent on government funding.
On Saturday the ruling party African National Congress’s influential Youth League threatened Nedbank with reprisals unless it restored sponsorship of ASA’s road running series.
“The ANCYL will mobilise all patriotic South Africans, corporations, institutions and government departments that bank with Nedbank to withdraw their accounts from the bank and switch to other banks if the sponsorship is not retained,” league spokesperson Floyd Shivambu said.
Pillay said nothing was resolved at the athletes meeting “because the meeting was disrupted by a group of individuals who arrived drunk. I have been told ASA mobilised these people to disrupt the meeting.”
Mokganyetsi said he had led the walk-out because Pillay had “not stuck to the agenda”. He denied anyone had been drinking alcohol.
“Nobody caused a disruption,” said Mokganyetsi.