IAAF rules 'dehumanising' - Parliament

29 April 2018 - 15:23
By SowetanLIVE
Caster Semenya wins the women's 800m during 2018 Liquid Telecom Athletix Grand Prix Series 3 meeting at Dal Josaphat Athletics Stadium on March 22, 2018 in Paarl, South Africa.
Image: Roger Sedres/Gallo Images Caster Semenya Caster Semenya wins the women's 800m during 2018 Liquid Telecom Athletix Grand Prix Series 3 meeting at Dal Josaphat Athletics Stadium on March 22, 2018 in Paarl, South Africa.

Unjust‚ sexist and dehumanising. That is how Parliament’s presiding officers on Sunday described regulations passed by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) that will “stifle” Caster Semenya’s reign as a champion athlete.

That is how Parliament’s presiding officers on Sunday described regulations passed by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) that will “stifle” Caster Semenya’s reign as a champion athlete.

Semenya is the reigning world and Olympic champion over 800m.

Top international athletes have rallied to Semenya’s cause against the new rules to compel women athletes with high levels of naturally occurring testosterone to take medication to reduce them‚ the Sunday Times reported.

Parliament’s presiding officers‚ National Assembly speaker Baleka Mbete and National Council of Provinces chairperson Thandi Modise condemned the regulations as discriminatory in a statement on Sunday.

“Speaker Mbete and Chairperson Modise have called the targeted introduction of the regulations as unjust‚ sexist‚ dehumanising and should be condemned by all human rights proponents in the world. Physiques of African women have and continue to suffer unjustified and racially humiliating scrutiny and mockery. This must stop‚” said the statement.

“Parliament strongly believes that the latest IAAF’s regulations to prescribe a maximum of five-nanomoles of testosterone per litre of blood and a hormonal treatment of women athletes with higher measurements‚ particularly in categories where Caster Semenya currently reigns as a champion for nearly a decade‚ are blatant efforts to eliminate her.”

The presiding officers called on sister parliaments under international legislative bodies‚ such as the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association and the Inter-Parliamentary Union‚ to take a stand and reject the IAAF's “blatant old-fashioned prejudice”.

The regulations threatened not only Semenya’s career but also a generation of young girls from rural and disadvantaged backgrounds who were inspired by the athlete to break the proverbial glass ceilings in the careers of their choice‚ said the statement.