Human Rights victory for Caster Semenya

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Adnaan Mohamed

Guest
Athletics South Africa (ASA) is delighted to learn of the decision by the European Court of Human Rights set out in their press release today declaring that the decision to impose the DSD regulations on Caster Semenya was discriminatory and in violation of her human rights.

The ruling has vindicated ASA who has all along contended that the regulations were ill-conceived, did not have a proper scientific basis and were highly discriminatory against elite female athletes with elevated testosterone levels, which did not give them an unfair advantage over their other female competitors.

ASA concurs with the Court’s views that Semenya had not been provided with sufficient
institutional and procedural safeguards at the Court of Arbitration for Sport and at the Swiss
Federal Supreme Court to have her complaints against the regulations examined effectively and that domestic remedies available to her could not be considered effective in her case. The Court also found that she had been discriminated against and respect for her private life as well as her rights to an effective remedy had been violated.

ASA is still awaiting the judgment to be handed down in English whereupon ASA will confer with its legal team to ascertain the consequences of the court’s ruling and to make a determination on her rights to participate in the sport of athletics.

ASA would like to once again thank the government of South Africa, the ASA Board, legal and medical teams, all other organisations and individuals that supported the challenge against the highly discriminatory regulations that precluded her from participating in the sport in which she and other affected athletes excelled, and ASA looks forward to welcoming her earliest return to the international athletics competitions in due course.

The post Human Rights victory for Caster Semenya appeared first on Western Province Athletics.

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