by brod » Wed Aug 19, 2009 7:00 pm
by rod_rooster » Thu Aug 20, 2009 10:13 am
by Dirko » Thu Aug 20, 2009 11:27 am
by Wedgie » Thu Aug 20, 2009 2:41 pm
Armchair expert wrote:Such a great club are Geelong
by Dogwatcher » Thu Aug 20, 2009 2:43 pm
by Dirko » Thu Aug 20, 2009 2:44 pm
Wedgie wrote:she's passed the "visual test"
by Booney » Thu Aug 20, 2009 4:27 pm
by Wedgie » Thu Aug 20, 2009 5:19 pm
Armchair expert wrote:Such a great club are Geelong
by ORDoubleBlues » Fri Sep 11, 2009 11:28 pm
by rod_rooster » Sat Sep 12, 2009 12:31 am
by dedja » Sat Sep 12, 2009 12:36 am
rod_rooster wrote:Unfortunately the person and their feelings and sensitivities have been forgotten in this drama. The athlete will have already been significantly scarred mentally by this and these findings will only make things worse. The athlete has done nothing wrong and is unfairly being humiliated in front of the world. This is a situation where no-one wins but one person loses in a big way.
by JAS » Sat Sep 12, 2009 12:49 am
dedja wrote:rod_rooster wrote:Unfortunately the person and their feelings and sensitivities have been forgotten in this drama. The athlete will have already been significantly scarred mentally by this and these findings will only make things worse. The athlete has done nothing wrong and is unfairly being humiliated in front of the world. This is a situation where no-one wins but one person loses in a big way.
by JAS » Sat Sep 12, 2009 12:58 am
Semenya 'must not be humiliated'
Indian athlete Santhi Soundarajan fears Caster Semenya will face the same "humiliation" that she did if the South African fails a gender test.
Soundarajan was stripped of 800m silver at the 2006 Asian Games after failing a test and later attempted suicide.
The 28-year-old told BBC Radio 5 live: "It was a very bitter and humiliating experience for me.
"Sports federations should come up with a solution to this, rather than ostracising somebody."
Tests on Semenya, who won 800m gold at the world championships in Berlin last month, are likely to show that she has an "inter-gender condition", which would mean she has both male and female sex characteristics.
No matter what the result of the tests, Soundarajan believes the 18-year-old should be allowed to both keep her gold medal - which the IAAF have said she will be able to - and to continue to compete as a female.
"I would like to appeal that there should be a serious reconsideration about the way these issues are addressed," said the Indian runner, who was found to have female sex organs but also internal testes and the male XY chromosome.
"I feel the medal should be with her, not withdrawn, and I strongly feel and suggest that she should be able to continue to run. The sporting bodies should treat her with honour.
"She should not undergo the same sort of humiliation and insults I have faced. This would affect her mentally and physically and she would not be in a position to hold her head high."
Soundarajan said she was shunned by her local community after being stripped of her silver medal and banned from competing by the Indian Olympic Association.
"I am treated as a social outcast, even in my own local place," she said.
"Even this morning there was a local cycle race and I was an official. I overheard a police official who was in charge of the security talking about my gender and pointing at me saying 'this was the girl who failed the gender test'.
"It is really, really humiliating. I am unable to move in the society, to go out anywhere. People don't look upon me as an Asian Games medallist, but only speak about when I failed a gender test.
Soundarajan has been banned from competing in domestic or international races, which she says is unfair.
"To be very frank, the process of puberty has never happened to me and I have never been through the menstrual cycle," she said.
"Attaining puberty or going through the menstrual cycle alone does not categorise somebody as a female though.
"So I feel it is unfair to detriment the quality of people based on chromosomes. I feel it is unethical and biased."
by MightyEagles » Sat Sep 12, 2009 9:20 am
Wedgie wrote:Its a really interesting and controversial can of worms being opened, she's passed the "visual test" which youd think was good enough but African nations unlike most often produce people "with a mixture of chromosonmes and both male and female characteristics". There are men, women and "Mutolas" who are neither proper men nor proper females.
Not sure how it can be handled*.
by Mickyj » Sat Sep 12, 2009 10:13 am
by Mickyj » Sat Sep 12, 2009 10:15 am
SJABC wrote:Wedgie wrote:she's passed the "visual test"
What visual test you use?
Here's the rest of the field....
by Wedgie » Sat Sep 12, 2009 10:52 am
Armchair expert wrote:Such a great club are Geelong
by Swooper16 » Mon Sep 14, 2009 3:13 pm
by JAS » Fri Nov 06, 2009 3:13 am
South Africa's Olympic governing body has suspended Athletics South Africa's president, while the ASA has apologised to Caster Semenya over her gender row.
Semenya, 18, was embroiled in controversy after her 800m victory at the 2009 World Championships in Berlin.
ASA chief Leonard Chuene admitted in September he lied about whether Semenya had been gender tested before Berlin.
The ASA board and its members have also been suspended pending a disciplinary investigation into the matter.
A statement said: "Athletics South Africa wishes to publicly and unconditionally apologise to Caster Semenya and her family, the President of South Africa as well as to all South Africans for the handling of her gender verification processes and the subsequent aftermath."
Semenya burst on to the world stage when she ran one minute, 56.72 seconds for the 800m in July, smashing her previous personal best by more than seven seconds.
She also broke Zola Budd's long-standing South African 800m record before arriving in Berlin as the newly-crowned African junior champion.
The teenager then left her rivals trailing in Berlin to win by 2.5 seconds from 2007 champion Janeth Jepkosgei in a time of 1.55.45, the fastest time of the year.
On the same day, it emerged that gender tests had been carried out on Semenya earlier in August - Chuene at first denied knowledge of those tests before admitting he lied to protect Semenya.
However, former South Africa coach Wilfred Daniels told BBC Sport that the ASA kept a lot from Semenya.
He said: "She was told it was random doping tests she was being taken to in South Africa and Berlin, in the meantime it was gender verification tests.
"She was never briefed properly about her rights and the implications about the outcome of the tests.
"She was never given the opportunity to make a decision to compete or allow medical interventions that could regularise her situation.
"So those issues remained in the public domain for a very long time and brought so much trauma that I don't think she will ever be able to be a normal woman ever again, to compete on the top tracks of the world and be accepted as a bona fide woman competitor."
Meanwhile, the ASA has also acknowledged the criticism it received from South Africa's ruling party, the African National Congress, which set up a task force to look into the ASA's handling of the affair.
The ASA statement added: "Athletics South Africa has taken note of the African National Congress Caster Semenya Support Task Team media statement issued on 16 October relating to Caster Semenya and the gender verification tests conducted on her.
"ASA appreciates the ANC's position on this matter, fully welcomes and accepts without any reservations the findings and recommendations of the task team."
South Africa's Olympic governing body, SASCOC, says it is considering "taking appropriate action against the IAAF for its disregard of Semenya's rights to privacy".
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