Semenya sparks fresh gender row
By Mike Hurst From: The Daily Telegraph October 12, 2009 12:00AM
WORLD athletics chiefs will this week attempt what no man has achieved in history - determining exactly what makes a woman.
The global scandal over sexually ambiguous world champion Caster Semenya has forced the International Association of Athletics Federations to set down in black and white a working definition of what constitutes a woman, for the purposes of competition.
That definition will take into account the biological, biochemical, anatomical, psychological and probably even sociological characteristics that make up females.
IAAF general secretary Pierre Weiss said yesterday the IAAF medical commission, which will meet this Friday, will be asked to come up with a definition of a female and the judicial commission will be asked to frame regulations to safeguard women-only competition.
“We will get a reply in the next 12 months - I don’t expect that anything will come out before,” Weiss said.
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Yet the IAAF is scheduled to decide next month whether Semenya, 18, had an unfair advantage over other women when she emerged from obscurity to win the women’s 800m title in Berlin on August 19.
How “unfair advantage” may be assessed when there is no definition of a “normal” woman is part of the complexity of the Semenya saga, which The Daily Telegraph sparked on September 11 with the revelation that gender tests conducted on Semenya revealed the presence of internal testes which produced three times the amount of testosterone of “normal” females.
Weiss said he had asked colleagues from other sports if they had a definition of a woman for the purposes of participation in sport.
“Nobody has one,” he said.
“But nobody (else) has had the problem so far.”
Athletics South Africa’s president Leonard Chuene and some of his fellow managers were told by IAAF medical commission member and South African team doctor Harold Adams not to allow Semenya to run in the women’s world championship following the results of sex tests conducted in Pretoria on August 7.
Chuene denied any such tests had been conducted or that he had been advised by Adams to withdraw Semenya from competition, but admitted late last month he had lied.