France’s female boxers are banned from world championships due to genetic sex test delay

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French female boxers have been barred from competing at the inaugural World Boxing Championships in Liverpool after failing to meet a deadline for a genetic sex test that the French boxing federation (FFBoxe) said was incompatible with French law.

World Boxing, which issued a list of competitors for Thursday’s opening rounds with no French entrants included, said it would not comment on individual cases but added it had warned all federations of the policy.

FFBoxe said it was told on 21 July that all female athletes needed to provide results of a “femininity test” during registration for the competition.

French law prohibits the federation from conducting the tests domestically or abroad without a medical prescription, FFBoxe said, prompting it to turn to a laboratory in Leeds upon World Boxing’s recommendation. Despite assurances that results would be delivered within 24 hours, they were delayed.

“With, as a consequence, the exclusion of our athletes as well as other female boxers from foreign delegations who also found themselves trapped,” FFBoxe said in a statement. “This is a profound injustice. Our athletes are being punished for a bureaucratic failure and a policy that was communicated far too late.”

World Boxing said that all federations had been warned on 21 August. “Receiving results for sex-testing can take 48 hours. Any tests completed later than 1 September would jeopardise your athlete’s entry into the official draw and competition. Please consider your arrival time to the UK if you require sex-testing in the UK,” the governing body said in a statement.

“World Boxing and its partners have been working with multiple national federations over the last three weeks to facilitate access to testing facilities at several locations in Great Britain and many boxers that are competing at the competition have been tested via this process.”

Maëlys Richol boxing Emilie Sonvico in Pueblo, Colorado, in April 2024
Maëlys Richol (left) competing in Colorado last year. ‘It is extremely hard to take,’ she said. ‘We are frustrated, angry, and deeply disappointed.’ Photograph: Isaiah J Downing/USA Today Sports

World Boxing, which will oversee boxing at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, introduced mandatory genetic testing in May for female athletes over 18 to confirm eligibility for competition. Its president, Boris van der Vorst, reiterated on Wednesday that it had introduced the tests to ensure safety and fairness.

An FFBoxe spokesperson said on Thursday it had still not received the test results from the laboratory, which he did not name, and was looking into the possibility of an appeal.

The French boxer Maëlys Richol said on Instagram that a year of work had been wasted due to poor management. “It is extremely hard to take. We are frustrated, angry, and deeply disappointed,” she said.

The controversy reignited debate on sex verification in sports. The Algerian boxer Imane Khelif, who won gold in the women’s welterweight division at the Paris Olympics last year, has appealed to the court of arbitration for sport against World Boxing’s decision to bar her from future events unless she undergoes genetic sex testing. Cas, sport’s highest court, dismissed her request to suspend the ruling while her case was heard.

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