‘Women won’t be battered to death by men’: JK Rowling hails Imane Khelif boxing ban

‘Women won’t be battered to death by men’: JK Rowling hails Imane Khelif boxing ban

Rounding on Human Rights Watch, which said during the Paris Games that the International Olympic Committee were “right to stand against sex testing”, Rowling said: “To paraphrase Marie Shear: Feminism is the radical notion that women, too, are humans with rights.” Juxtaposing an image of the Black Power salute at the Mexico City Olympics in 1968 with a picture of Turkey’s Esra Yildiz Kahraman making a double “X” sign in Paris to denote XX chromosomes, she said: “Some Olympics will be forever defined by photos the organisers would have preferred not to be taken.”

While the International Boxing Association banned Khelif from its events on the basis of biology, strictly defining womanhood by chromosomes, the IOC allowed the athlete to compete on the grandest stage in global sport because of female passport status. The consequence was an international scandal, with both Khelif and Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting unanimously winning every bout in Paris en route to Olympic golds, despite both having failed sex tests the previous year. Lin, likewise, did not appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport over that verdict.

Scottish author JK Rowling has eased the peer pressure that has long silenced people.

Scottish author JK Rowling has eased the peer pressure that has long silenced people.Credit: Getty

The IOC failed to respond to multiple requests for comment on the leaking of Khelif’s chromosomal results or the official certification of the Delhi laboratory that administered the tests. Mark Adams, the organisation’s spokesman, described the tests at a Paris press conference last year as “ad hoc” and “not legitimate”. While president Thomas Bach has sought to portray the banning of Khelif as a Russian-led misinformation exercise.

But the IBA, under Russian president Umar Kremlev, hit out strongly, calling on Khelif and Lin to apologise to the women whom they deprived of Olympic medals.

“The IBA remains unwavering in its decisions,” it said. “We stand firmly by our assessments and intentions. Notably, as World Boxing is set to receive identical results from these evaluations, we anticipate a forthcoming gesture of accountability – a formal apology from those athletes whose actions, inadvertently or otherwise, diverted well-deserved Olympic accolades away from our rightful female boxers.”

Imane Khelif, left, during a bout in Paris.

Imane Khelif, left, during a bout in Paris.Credit: Getty Images

Kotinos, the Qatari PR company representing Khelif, said: “Imane is a proven champion who has earned every step of her journey through hard work, discipline and heart.”

The statement offered no suggestion that Khelif would submit to a further sex test.

The London Telegraph

OR

Scroll to Top