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Reading: Caster Semenya labels Olympic sex verification tests ‘a disrespect for women’ – The Guardian
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Sports

Caster Semenya labels Olympic sex verification tests ‘a disrespect for women’ – The Guardian

Editorial Staff
Last updated: March 29, 2026 2:51 pm
Editorial Staff
3 days ago
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Semenya criticises IOC president Kirsty Coventry
‘Her being a woman coming from Africa … it causes harm’
Caster Semenya, the South African two‑time Olympic 800m champion, said on Sunday that the reinstatement by the International Olympic Committee of sex verification tests for the 2028 Los Angeles Games was “a disrespect for women”.
The hyperandrogenic former athlete also expressed disappointment that the measure was taken under the leadership of the new IOC president, Kirsty Coventry of Zimbabwe.
“For me, personally, for her being a woman coming from Africa, knowing how African women or women in the global south are affected by that, of course, it causes harm,” Semenya said during a Cape Town press conference on the sidelines of a sporting competition.
On Thursday the IOC reinstated genetic testing to determine female sex, starting with the 2028 Olympics, in effect banning transgender athletes and a large number of intersex athletes from women’s sports.
The IOC used chromosomal sex testing between 1968 and the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, before abandoning it in 1999 under pressure from the scientific community, which questioned its effectiveness, and from its own athletes’ commission.
“It came as a failure. And that’s why it was dropped,” Semenya said in Cape Town.
“For you as a woman, why will you be tested to prove that you fit? You know, it’s like now we need to prove that we are worthy as women to take part in sports. That’s a disrespect for women.”
Semenya has become the symbol of the struggle of hyperandrogenic athletes, a battle to assert rights that the South African has waged since winning a first world title in the 800m in 2009, on the athletics tracks and then in the courtrooms.
Announcing the new policy on Thursday, the IOC said in a statement: “Eligibility for any female category event at the Olympic Games or any other IOC event, including individual and team sports, is now limited to biological females, determined on the basis of a one-time SRY gene screening.”
It will be carried out through a saliva sample, cheek swab or blood sample. The new policy removes a potential source of conflict between the IOC and Donald Trump at the LA Olympics. The US president issued an executive order banning transgender athletes from women’s sport soon after he came to office.
While sports such as swimming, athletics, cycling and rowing have brought in bans, many others have permitted transgender women to compete in the female category if they lowered their testosterone levels, normally through taking a course of drugs.
The new ban will also cover athletes with differences in sex development (DSD), the rare condition in which a person’s hormones, genes and reproductive organs may have a combination of male and female characteristics.
The best-known DSD athlete of recent years is Semenya, who has male XY chromosomes.
The IOC is bringing in the new policy after the women’s boxing competition at the 2024 Paris Olympics was rocked by a row over the sexes of the Algerian fighter Imane Khelif and Lin Yu-ting of Chinese Taipei. Khelif and Lin were excluded from the International Boxing Association’s 2023 world championships after the IBA said they had failed eligibility tests.
However, the IOC allowed them both to compete at the Paris Games, saying they had been victims of “a sudden and arbitrary decision by the IBA”. Both boxers went on to win gold medals. Lin has since been cleared to compete in the female category at World Boxing events.

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