South African Olympic champion on her ECHR appeal, her 5000m ambitions and campaigning for athletes like her in the future

Caster Semenya should be angry, but she isn’t. As the clock ticks down towards the Tokyo Olympics, the South African should, like her rivals, be training for the push to land a third consecutive gold medal.

Instead, the 30 year-old, who has fought a wave of prejudice and stigma throughout her life, is forlornly waiting on news from the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), which, in turn, could convince World Athletics that being asked to take medication is perhaps not the most humane way of dealing with a woman who has a congenital condition some believe hands her an unfair advantage.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Frustration and anger at Labour’s election disaster | Letters

Readers respond to the party’s poor performance in the Hartlepool byelection and…

Six countries invited to arms fair are on Foreign Office human rights list

Department for International Trade sent invitations even though nations are of ‘particular…

EU needs sanctions commissioner, says Lithuanian foreign minister

Gabrielius Landsbergis expresses frustration at the number of loopholes being exploited The…