SPORTS
A Boxer's Stand Against New Rules
Eindhoven, NetherlandsFri Jun 06 2025
A well-known boxer, Imane Khelif, will not be competing in the Eindhoven Box Cup. This decision comes right after a new rule was put in place by World Boxing. The rule requires all athletes to undergo sex testing. Khelif, who is from Algeria, did not sign up in time for the event. The deadline for registrations was Thursday.
The media director of the tournament, Dirk Renders, made it clear that the decision to exclude Khelif was not theirs. He expressed regret over the situation. Khelif had planned to return to international competition at the Eindhoven tournament. However, World Boxing announced its new sex testing policy just last Friday. This policy specifically mentioned Khelif, stating that she would need to be screened to compete in any upcoming events, including the Eindhoven Box Cup.
The mayor of Eindhoven, Jeroen Dijsselbloem, was not happy with World Boxing's decision. He wrote a letter to the Dutch Boxing Federation and the International Boxing Federation. In the letter, he stated that all athletes are welcome in Eindhoven. He also criticized the use of controversial "gender tests" to exclude athletes. He called on the organization to allow Khelif to compete.
Khelif won a gold medal at the Paris Olympics last summer. She faced a lot of scrutiny, along with Taiwan's Lin Yu-ting, another gold medal winner. The previous governing body for Olympic boxing, the International Boxing Association, had disqualified both fighters from its 2023 world championships. They claimed the fighters failed unspecified eligibility tests. However, the IBA was banned due to decades of misdeeds and controversy. The International Olympic Committee ran the past two Olympic boxing tournaments instead. They used the same sex eligibility rules as previous Olympics. Khelif and Lin were eligible to compete under those standards.
World Boxing has been provisionally approved as the boxing organizer for the 2028 Los Angeles Games. They have faced pressure from boxers and their federations to create sex eligibility standards. The president of World Boxing, Boris van der Vorst, apologized after Khelif was singled out in the governing body’s announcement last week. Some boxers and their federations have already spoken out against her inclusion in the LA Games. Khelif won gold at the Eindhoven event last year, defeating Australia’s Marissa Williamson-Pohlman in the final. She also competed at the Tokyo Games in 2021, losing in the quarterfinals to eventual gold medalist Kellie Harrington of Ireland.
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questions
What are the potential long-term implications of mandatory sex testing on athletes' mental and physical health?
What if boxers were required to pass a 'pizza eating' test instead of a sex test – would that be more fair?
How does the new policy compare to previous eligibility standards used in Olympic competitions?
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