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He said he had not been told anything by the IAAF, Athletics South Africa or his daughter. "I know nothing," he said. Davies said the newspaper's report "should be treated with caution." The IAAF has said Semenya probably would keep her medal because the case was not related to a doping matter. "Our legal advice is that, if she proves to have an advantage because of the male hormones, then it will be extremely difficult to strip the medal off her, since she has not cheated," Davies wrote to the AP. "She was naturally made that way, and she was entered in Berlin by her team and accepted by the IAAF. But let's wait and see once we have the final decision." Leonard Chuene, the president of Athletics South Africa, told the AP that all he has heard from the IAAF is that the test results will be available in November. "The results are not in the country yet, so we cannot comment on anything," Chuene said.
Associated Press writer Donna Bryson in Johannesburg and AP Sports Writer Howard Fendrich in New York contributed to this report.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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