PARIS, March 28 — The International Olympic Committee’s new policy on gender testing could be seen as “smart positioning” given the current US political climate but a...
Wangsa Maju scandal: As video of alleged extortion goes viral PKR tells two implicated members to step down from posts After winning seven years ago, Malaysia’s first Sikh bagpipe band wants to repeat history this year at World Pipe Band ChampionshipThe IOC on Thursday announced the re-introduction of gender testing to determine eligibility to compete in women’s events, an issue which caused a furore in the boxing at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
— Reuters picand enjoy FREE RM10 & when you sign up using code VERSAMM10 with min. cash of RM100 today! T&Cs apply.PARIS, March 28 — The International Olympic Committee’s new policy on gender testing could be seen as “smart positioning” given the current US political climate but a former IOC marketing executive has told AFP he did not believe it was the “driving factor”. The IOC on Thursday announced the re-introduction of gender testing to determine eligibility to compete in women’s events, an issue which caused a furore in the boxing at the 2024 Paris Olympics.The decision was welcomed by US President Donald Trump, who last year issued an executive order banning transgender athletes from women’s sport.“With the current US political climate, a cynic might say that removing this pressure point before 2028 was smart positioning,” said former IOC executive Terrence Burns.The IOC decision comes just over a year after Kirsty Coventry became the first woman to be elected IOC president, succeeding Thomas Bach. Whereas Bach brought in a policy in 2021 that left individual federations to decide their own regulations, the IOC is now introducing a blanket policy across all Olympic sports. Coventry had made resolving the thorny issue a priority after the 2024 Paris Games were rocked by a gender row involving women boxers Imane Khelif if Algeria and Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting. 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”.While Burns said the IOC had “drawn a line under” the issue with the new policy, his fellow former IOC marketing executive Michael Payne told AFP that Coventry had “moved actively and decisively”.“For all the honourable reasons about human rights, everyone’s right to compete no matter their biological make-up, you could not disenfranchise 99.99 per cent of the population to address an issue of 0.01 per cent.”The reintroduction of the testing for the SRY gene was not music to the ears of the scientist who discovered it, Andrew Sinclair. He said ahead of the IOC announcement that the idea that the biological sex be entirely defined by chromosomes is “overly simplistic”. Sinclair was among the experts who persuaded the IOC to drop the tests before the 2000 Sydney Olympics, and he said “it is therefore extremely surprising years later there is an ill-advised move to reintroduce it.”“But governing bodies rarely have perfect science, they have the best available tools and a decision that can’t wait.Payne, whose self-deprecatory warts-and-all book “Fast Tracks and Dark Deals” about his time at the IOC under Juan Antonio Samaranch Senior caused a stir last year within the movement, is not sure how much weight Sinclair’s views will carry. “Is there a single subject where all scientists can agree on the same solution?” said the 68-year-old Irishman.Both Burns and Payne believe there will be legal challenges, with Payne saying it is “the nature of the society we live in today” but he added that “sport has to be governed by rules”.Burns, who since leaving the IOC has been a pivotal figure in five successful Olympic bid city campaigns, says the Court of Arbitration for Sport is well used to such cases. “The IOC’s best protection is a clean governance record, policy grounded in competitive fairness, applied consistently, documented thoroughly.” he said. “Human rights arguments will be made, but courts have generally respected sporting body jurisdiction when the process is defensible.”
International Olympic Committee Kirsty Coventry Terrence Burns Los Angeles 2028 Andrew Sinclair Gender Testing
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