Indian
sprinter Dutee Chand was the first athlete to challenge the IAAF's hyperandrogenism
regulations
|
Gender tests for female
athletes with high levels of testosterone could be reinstated after a new study
found it gave them a "competitive advantage".
BBC
Sport report continues:
Athletics'
governing body the IAAF commissioned the research because it wants to prove it
was right to test women with hyperandrogenism.
It
wants to reinstate rules limiting how much testosterone female athletes can
have in their bodies.
The
Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) suspended the rules in
July 2015.
The
CAS suspension was for two years, giving the IAAF until July 2017 to prove its
case.
The
new research by doctors Stephane Bermon and Pierre-Yves Garnier has been
published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.
It
is based on analysis of samples taken from 2,127 elite male and female athletes
from the 2011 and 2013 World Championships.
It
concludes high testosterone levels give a "significant competitive
advantage" in the 400m, 400m hurdles, 800m, hammer throw, and pole vault
events in particular.
What happens next?
CAS
had made the ruling after clearing Indian sprinter Dutee Chand to
race, in a decision which questioned the validity of so-called gender tests
around naturally high testosterone levels in female athletes.
Chand
took the case to CAS after being banned following a failed a hormone test, with
her legal team arguing the ruling was discriminatory and flawed.
In
challenging the decision, the IAAF will use the evidence from Bermon and
Garnier's study.
"Our
starting position is to defend, protect and promote fair female
competition," said Bermon.
"If,
as the study shows, in certain events female athletes with higher testosterone
levels can have a competitive advantage of between 1.8%-4.5% over female
athletes with lower testosterone levels, imagine the magnitude of the advantage
for female athletes with testosterone levels in the normal male range.
"This
study is one part of the evidence the IAAF will be submitting to CAS regarding
the degree of performance advantage that hyperandrogenic female athletes enjoy
over female athletes with normal testosterone levels.
"We
continue to gather more data and research on our journey to providing a fair
and level playing field for females in our sport."
In
a statement, the IAAF added that the rules would remain suspended until the
issue is resolved with CAS, meaning "that this process will have no impact
on the IAAF World Championships in London this August".
Why is this an issue?
Chand
was the first athlete to challenge the regulations, introduced in the wake of
the Caster Semenya affair in 2009.
South
African teenager Semenya was asked to take a gender test shortly before winning
the 800m at the 2009 World Championships in Berlin.
Subjected
to enormous media scrutiny, Semenya subsequently returned to the sport, winning
Olympic gold medals in the 800m at London 2012 and Rio 2016.
She
finished second in London but this was upgraded when Russian Mariya Savinova was stripped of her gold after being found guilty of doping.
Critics
have described the IAAF's stance as "biological racism", calling it discriminatory, arbitrary and pointing to
possible psychological effects on those who have to take the tests.
In
2015, Chand told the BBC: "I know people started suspecting whether I was
a woman or a man. All the honour I earned - I lost.
"My friends used to start asking what's wrong with me, and started to avoid me. In training centres, where girls used to share rooms, I was kept separately."
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