World Triathlon’s Executive Board has
approved the Transgender Policy, following a period of consultation with the
Medical Committee, Athletes Committee, Coaches Committee, Legal &
Constitution Committee, Women’s Committee and the Equality, Diversion &
Inclusion Commission, as well as multiple experts in the field and the
transgender community.
The Policy, that will be put in place
in 30 days’ time, states:
“To compete in the female category in
an Elite or Age-Group triathlon competition, a Transgender athlete must
demonstrate that the concentration of testosterone in the athlete's serum has
been less than 2.5 nmol/L continuously for a period of at least 24 months.
Also, at least 48 months must have elapsed since the Transgender athlete has
competed as a male in any sporting competition”.
The Transgender Policy was approved
by the majority of the Executive Board, with the votes against of Vice
President Ian Howard and President of the Athletes Committee Tamas Toth.
“We have been studying this matter
for over a year, we have listened to the voices of all World Triathlon
stakeholders, and I can only thank all the Committees and Commissions for the
detailed work carried out by them to inform this policy. We are a small
International Federation, but one that has always had inclusion and gender
balance in our DNA. The Policy that we have just approved shows that we are
prioritizing the fairness principle but showing inclusiveness. It is fully
aligned with the IOC’s recommendation, and similar to what other IFs have done
in the last months. We will of course monitor the situation and the evolution
of this policy, and we are open to reviewing and discussing it as much as
necessary over time, as this subject is still evolving and we need to be
flexible”, said World Triathlon President and IOC Member, Marisol Casado.
Among the groups consulted in the
last month by World Triathlon are sport scientists including Emma Hilton,
Yannis Pitsidalis and Ross Tucker; University experts including Dr. Roger
Pielke Jr, Dr. Alun Willims and Dr. Ada Cheung; IOC Human Rights expert
Madeleine Pape; IOC advisor Daniel Berezowsky, and transgender athletes
including Joanna Harper, Chris Mosier, Rachel McBride, Verity Smith, Patty Actually,
Annie Lieberman and Veronica Ivy.
ABOUT WORLD TRIATHLON
World Triathlon is the international
governing body for the Olympic and Paralympic sport of triathlon and all
related multisport disciplines around the world, including duathlon, aquathlon,
cross triathlon and winter triathlon. Triathlon made its Olympic debut in
Sydney 2000, with a third medal event, the Mixed Team Relay, added to the
programme at Tokyo 2020, while para triathlon was first added to the Paralympic
programme at Rio 2016. World Triathlon is proudly committed to the development
of the sport worldwide, with inclusion, equality, sustainability and
transparency at our core as we seek to help triathletes at all levels of the
sport to be extraordinary.
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