Transgender athletes condemn ban on inclusion in female events
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[March 24, 2023]
By Stefica Nicol Bikes and Rory Carroll
SYDNEY/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Transgender athletes have condemned
World Athletics' exclusion of transgender women from elite female
competitions, while the decision was welcomed by some sportswomen as
a win for fairness.
Athletics' global governing body on Thursday voted to ban
transgender women who have gone through male puberty from competing
in women's events, citing a "need to protect the female category".
Canadian cyclist Kristen Worley, a transitioned athlete who has
legally challenged the gender policies of the International Olympic
Committee (IOC), said the World Athletics (WA) decision was
"disheartening and disappointing".
"What's happening is the most vulnerable are being excluded from
sport more for political reasons and not based on science and
research," Worley told Reuters in an interview.
"This has effects not just at the international levels but
consequently over communities across the globe including communities
in the United States."
The decision follows a similar move by World Aquatics, the global
governing body for swimming, to exclude transgender athletes from
women's categories last year.
WA President Sebastian Coe said the decision was made after
consulting 40 member federations, coaches, athletes, transgender
groups, United Nations experts and the IOC.
While some argue that going through male puberty gives transgender
women physical advantages, supporters of transgender participation
in sports say not enough research has been done into whether
transgender women have any advantage.
Worley said the notion that transgender women athletes were
dominating women's sport was nonsense.
"I'm watching all the news groups put out images on Twitter with no
images of transitioned athletes at the elite levels of the World
Athletics because there aren't any," she said.
"So this is purely a political move by Seb Coe and World Athletics
to deal with the right-wing issues, political relationships and
obviously potential sponsors that are funding World Athletics
today."
'FORCES OF HATE'
Ricki Coughlan, one of Australia's first transgender athletes in
professional running, said WA's ruling would embolden the "forces of
hate" against transgender people.
"There's no nice way of putting this," she told Reuters.
"The forces of hate that are out there that don't want transgender
people to exist in our society ... will take this as a win and will
then say 'okay, let's move onto the next thing'."
WA also tightened eligibility requirements for athletes with
Differences in Sex Development in women's events, halving the upper
threshold of testosterone levels.
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Transgender athlete Ricki Coughlan
speaks at Sydney Cricket Ground, in Sydney, Australia October 1,
2020. REUTERS/Stefica Bikes
DSD athletes have male testes but do not produce
enough of the hormone Dihydrotestosterone (DHT) that is necessary
for the formation of male external genitalia.
"For women with intersex traits, they will continue to be subjected
to horrific sex testing practices and medically unnecessary surgery,
gender-based violence and discrimination," Hudson Taylor, founder
and executive director of Athlete Ally, said in a statement.
Athlete Ally advocates for the inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender and intersex (LGBTI) people in sport.
Australia's national athletics federation said it would abide by the
WA decision, but retain its own guidelines for including transgender
athletes in community-level sport.
New Zealand's federation said the subject of transgender athletes
was "a very sensitive topic" and it needed time to digest and
understand the new rules.
'BIG STEP FOR FAIRNESS'
A number of elite women in track and field welcomed the WA decision,
including British runner and Olympian Emily Diamond who tweeted
"thank you for following the science".
"A big step for fairness and protecting the female category
hopefully this will be the rule across all levels now, not just
elite ranking events," wrote Diamond, who won a 400 metres relay
bronze at the 2016 Rio Olympics.
Olympian and marathon runner Mara Yamauchi tweeted: "Good news! Odd
to celebrate something which is common sense."
Save Women's Sport Australasia, a group campaigning against
transgender athletes in female sport, applauded the decision.
"Well, it's not a ban, it just actually moves to protect the female
category to female competitors and it was an excellent decision,"
spokeswoman Ro Edge told Reuters.
"So it's really reassuring to hear president Seb Coe come out and
say they've got to maintain fairness of female participation above
all other considerations."
(Additional reporting by Ian Ransom in Melbourne and Nick Mulvenney
in Sydney; Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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