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Asian Games medalist from India fails gender test
NEW DELHI (India)—Asian Games silver medallist Santhi Soundarajan of
India has failed a sex test and will be stripped of her medal, officials
said.
“Santhi was subjected to a gender test in Doha and we have received the
report which says she failed the test,” said Manmohan Singh, chairman of
the Indian Olympic Association’s Medical Commission. The gender
verification test, which is not mandatory but carried out if officials
want it or a rival protests, was done soon after Soundarajan won the
silver medal in the women’s 800m on December 9.
She was withdrawn from the 1,500m and sent home once the initial report
was handed over to Indian Games officials, an Athletics Federation of
India (AFI) source said on Monday. “The Olympic Council of Asia (OCA)
has been informed. The medal will be taken away from her,” the source
said. Maryam Jussuf Jamal of Bahrain won the 800 metres title in Doha
where Soundarajan took the silver ahead of Viktoriya Yalovtseva of
Kazakhstan. Zamira Amirova of Uzbekistan was fourth. The OCA has yet to
officially announce Soundarajan’s failed test at the Asiad which ended
in Doha, Qatar on Friday. Media reports said the OCA medical panel
apparently took up the case on a “protest”, but it was not immediately
clear which team had protested about Soundarajan’s gender.
The panel to decide gender cases comprises, among others, a
gynaecologist, an endocrinologist, a psychologist and a genetic expert.
A range of tests, including a blood test, are carried out. Athletes who
fail gender tests can seek a review by an expert panel after two years
following “surgery and hormone therapy”, media reports quoted officials
as saying. If cleared, the athletes are eligible to compete again.
The 25-year-old Soundarajan, whose parents are brick-kiln workers, hails
from the village of Kathakkurichi in Pudukkottai district of the
southern state of Tamil Nadu. On Monday, Tamil Nadu state chief minister
M. Karunanidhi brushed aside the controversy and presented a cheque of
1.5 million rupees (33,500 dollars) to Soundarajan for her Asiad
performance. “I do not want to talk about it,” Soundarajan was quoted as
saying by the Press Trust of India when reporters at the presentation
ceremony questioned her about the failed test. Soundarajan had cleared
the gender test at the Asian track and field championships in the South
Korean city of Incheon last year where she won the silver in the 800m.
She also won the gold medal in the 1,500m at the South Asian Games in
Colombo in August and was declared the best athlete at the Indian
national championships in New Delhi in September. A media report said
Soundarajan had been refused employment in the Indian railways last year
because its medical panel “was not satisfied about her gender.”—Agencies |