Weightlifter Hubbard becomes
lightning rod for criticism of transgender policy
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[July 30, 2019]
Transgender weightlifter Laurel
Hubbard's gold medal-winning performance at the Pacific Games
continues to reverberate long after the event, with a New Zealand
women's group demanding sports authorities put a stop to "unfair"
competition.
Hubbard, who competed for New Zealand in men's weightlifting before
her transition in her thirties, won two golds and a silver in three
of the women's heavyweight categories at the Games in Samoa earlier
this month.
She topped the podium ahead of Samoan runner up and Commonwealth
Games champion Feagaiga Stowers in both categories, triggering
outrage in the Pacific island nation.
With Hubbard free to compete at next year's Tokyo Olympics, the
41-year-old has become a lightning rod for criticism of the
International Olympic Committee (IOC)'s guidelines for the inclusion
of transgender athletes.
On Monday, New Zealand based lobby group "Speak Up For Women", which
advocates that sport must be categorized by sex rather than gender
identity, called on the country's Olympic committee and sports
minister to "defend women's sport".
"Kiwis (New Zealanders) know that males competing in women's sport
is blatantly unfair," the group's spokesperson Ani O'Brien said.
The call follows criticism from British advocates "Fair Play for
Women", who wrote on Twitter that sports officials needed to "wake
up" in the days after Hubbard's Pacific Games titles.
IOC guidelines issued in 2015 said any transgender athlete could
compete as a woman provided their testosterone levels are below 10
nanomoles per liter for at least 12 months prior to their first
competition.
That has been criticized by some scientists, who say it does little
to mitigate natural biological advantages enjoyed by male-born
athletes, including bone and muscle density.
Researchers at the Dunedin-based University of Otago said in a
peer-reviewed study published earlier this month that the IOC
guidelines were "poorly drawn" and the mandated testosterone level
was still "significantly higher" than that of women.
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Laurel Hubbard of New Zealand competes. REUTERS/Paul Childs
The study advocated that the IOC ditch its "binary" approach to
competition and consider introducing a transgender category or find
another solution that balances the desire for inclusion with the
need for a level playing field.
The research was dismissed by transgender advocates and athletes.
"The opinions of scientists although valid, are just that,
opinions," said New Zealand mountain biker Kate Weatherly, who
transitioned as a teenager and has become a national champion
competing against women.
"I'm not winning by crazy margins and the anecdotal evidence does
point to me having little to no advantage."
Hubbard has shunned the media since competing at last year's
Commonwealth Games at Gold Coast, where she was favorite to win
heavyweight gold but injured herself during a lift in the
competition.
Her golds at the Pacific Games have renewed her profile and her
status as a contender at international events.
They have also re-ignited a debate set to rage all the way to Tokyo
in 2020.
"I really don’t think he – she – should ever participate in this
(tournament), but I realize we have to (be) inclusive and we cannot
exclude these people," Samoan Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele
Malielegaoi told Reuters of Hubbard's participation at the Pacific
Games.
"They ought to participate in these Games in their own category."
(Reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne, additional reporting by
Jonathan Barrett, Editing by Nick Mulvenney)
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