The Prague Post - IOC's gender test directive throws up multiple questions

EUR -
AED 4.186331
AFN 72.386569
ALL 93.992206
AMD 419.518881
ANG 2.040903
AOA 1045.299549
ARS 1697.906586
AUD 1.654709
AWG 2.051843
AZN 1.939651
BAM 1.953577
BBD 2.295577
BDT 140.528221
BGN 1.927456
BHD 0.429707
BIF 3401.484137
BMD 1.139913
BND 1.474515
BOB 7.892948
BRL 5.930631
BSD 1.139698
BTN 108.786808
BWP 15.456274
BYN 3.306508
BYR 22342.28907
BZD 2.292281
CAD 1.620181
CDF 2593.301706
CHF 0.91979
CLF 0.026773
CLP 1053.712282
CNY 7.74508
CNH 7.746938
COP 3862.742399
CRC 518.707403
CUC 1.139913
CUP 30.207687
CVE 110.139654
CZK 24.215337
DJF 202.958131
DKK 7.474544
DOP 67.772276
DZD 151.956709
EGP 55.97017
ERN 17.098691
ETB 183.95853
FJD 2.583783
FKP 0.858499
GBP 0.856753
GEL 3.009552
GGP 0.858499
GHS 12.965131
GIP 0.858499
GMD 83.770858
GNF 9995.492971
GTQ 8.69499
GYD 238.407631
HKD 8.941481
HNL 30.505016
HRK 7.531411
HTG 149.079031
HUF 356.008411
IDR 20542.366905
ILS 3.421568
IMP 0.858499
INR 108.779019
IQD 1493.087674
IRR 1568519.886045
ISK 143.799612
JEP 0.858499
JMD 179.00628
JOD 0.808195
JPY 184.196236
KES 147.4476
KGS 99.684993
KHR 4575.772412
KMF 493.582359
KPW 1025.921836
KRW 1765.114959
KWD 0.352552
KYD 0.949811
KZT 541.179356
LAK 25564.681516
LBP 102062.8507
LKR 382.547925
LRD 206.862762
LSL 18.657921
LTL 3.365865
LVL 0.689522
LYD 7.320669
MAD 10.678699
MDL 20.184851
MGA 4841.447656
MKD 61.616498
MMK 2392.969618
MNT 4085.663391
MOP 9.20794
MRU 45.497622
MUR 53.883374
MVR 17.611345
MWK 1976.442015
MXN 20.015953
MYR 4.651186
MZN 72.841193
NAD 18.658002
NGN 1563.618165
NIO 41.941716
NOK 11.288218
NPR 174.062143
NZD 2.01031
OMR 0.438297
PAB 1.139693
PEN 3.895715
PGK 5.007247
PHP 70.192367
PKR 316.927756
PLN 4.290238
PYG 6926.117643
QAR 4.154672
RON 5.231974
RSD 117.329249
RUB 88.812024
RWF 1670.883771
SAR 4.29428
SBD 9.175276
SCR 15.723727
SDG 684.521437
SEK 11.078959
SGD 1.475634
SHP 0.85106
SLE 27.785356
SLL 23903.4037
SOS 651.353005
SRD 42.751855
STD 23593.891574
STN 24.472042
SVC 9.97265
SYP 125.996943
SZL 18.656522
THB 37.978493
TJS 10.542556
TMT 3.989694
TND 3.371863
TOP 2.744637
TRY 53.227991
TTD 7.732166
TWD 36.405161
TZS 2992.285662
UAH 51.07532
UGX 4177.22773
USD 1.139913
UYU 45.747335
UZS 13577.369436
VES 721.077648
VND 29968.305084
VUV 136.786246
WST 3.157154
XAF 655.208458
XAG 0.019043
XAU 0.00028
XCD 3.080671
XCG 2.054026
XDR 0.815058
XOF 655.211328
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.980987
ZAR 18.671941
ZMK 10260.581555
ZMW 20.771179
ZWL 367.051427
  • RYCEF

    0.4100

    19.91

    +2.06%

  • BCC

    -0.6400

    74.84

    -0.86%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22

    +0.23%

  • NGG

    2.2700

    82.45

    +2.75%

  • BCE

    0.5000

    21.52

    +2.32%

  • BTI

    1.3950

    61.955

    +2.25%

  • RIO

    1.2500

    94.6

    +1.32%

  • GSK

    2.2860

    53.586

    +4.27%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    13.13

    +0.91%

  • JRI

    0.0750

    13.015

    +0.58%

  • RELX

    0.2850

    31.665

    +0.9%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • BP

    0.9350

    37.085

    +2.52%

  • AZN

    10.2900

    194.15

    +5.3%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    65.61

    0%

IOC's gender test directive throws up multiple questions
IOC's gender test directive throws up multiple questions / Photo: Frederick FLORIN - AFP

IOC's gender test directive throws up multiple questions

The International Olympic Committee's announcement on Thursday that it is reintroducing gender testing to protect the female category, after last being used at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, raises practical, legal, ethical and scientific questions.

Text size:

AFP Sport endeavours to answer some of them:

Question: What do the tests consist of?

The screening of the SRY gene the IOC says is the "least intrusive and most precise method" and can be carried out by a swab of the interior of a cheek.

This test has been used since last year by athletics, boxing and skiing.

The test for the SRY gene is "almost always on the male Y chromosome" and "is used as a highly accurate proxy for biological sex" according to World Athletics.

Madeleine Pape, a sports sociologist at Lausanne University, told AFP "these tests are dependent on the (legal) context of each country".

An example arose at the World Boxing Championships in Liverpool last year.

French law forbids testing without medical justification and so as a result its women's team was barred from competing: they were tested on arrival in England but missed the deadline for submitting the results.

"The solution we have found, is that we benefit from all the occasions when athletes are outside France in order to do what is required," French athletics federation president Jean Gracia told AFP.

Question: What are the consequences for the athletes?

Those who have two X chromosomes can compete, and will not have to undergo a new test. But for those who test positive in the SRY test, there are two possible solutions.

Either they produce other factors in their defence, for example proof that their body does not know how to use the testosterone, or they show evidence of possessing feminine genitalia.

This is what happened in the eight "SRY" cases detected at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, who were cleared as eligible to compete, and Taiwan's 2024 Olympic boxing champion Lin Yu-ting, who was recently cleared to compete in the female category in World Boxing events, after the latter's medical experts ruled she was female.

However, committing oneself to this battle compels the athlete to undergo costly and complex investigations, either genetic sequencing, or an intrusive gynaecological examination.

For others the impact goes way beyond being disqualified, as the athletes suffer loss of income and social shame.

"Our dreams were broken and our lives turned upside down," nine athletes who have differences in sexual development (DSD), including South Africa's two-time Olympic women's 800m champion Caster Semenya, said in a letter to IOC president Kirsty Coventry on Wednesday.

"Some among us were disowned by members of their family, missed out on the possibility of receving an education and were forced to leave their country", others also had to undergo "harmful and pointless medical interventions", they said.

Question: Are the tests relevant to sport?

The IOC's previous policy -- under Coventry's predecessor Thomas Bach -- dating back to 2021 left it up to each international federation to set its own rules.

Nevertheless it did offer guidance to rely on data, without "presuming" that those with differences in sexual development or transgender automatically enjoy "a disproportionate competitive advantage".

Supporting this premise is that no scientific consensus has been reached in the intervening years to link sporting performance with possessing the SRY gene, taking into consideration a broad range of events such as sprinting, gymnastics, judo or shooting.

"The interest of these tests for sporting bodies is to 'target' both transgender and those with differences in sexual development", putting an end to distinct regulations, said Pape.

"However, while there is some data on trans athletes, there is no independent study on the performances of those with differences in sexual development."

The most damning response to the reintroduction of the testing for the SRY gene comes from the scientist who discovered it, Andrew Sinclair.

The idea that the biological sex be entirely defined by chromosomes is "overly simplistic" given the role played by the "hormones, genital organs and secondary sexual characteristics", he said last year.

"Along with numerous other experts, I convinced the IOC to abandon the use of the SRY test before the 2000 Olympics in Sydney," he said.

"It is therefore extremely surprising years later there is an ill-advised move to reintroduce it," he added.

Z.Pavlik--TPP