Current:Home > MarketsVitriol about female boxer Imane Khelif fuels concern of backlash against LGBTQ+ and women athletes -CapitalEdge
Vitriol about female boxer Imane Khelif fuels concern of backlash against LGBTQ+ and women athletes
View
Date:2025-04-14 15:40:43
PARIS (AP) — LGBTQ+ athletes, officials and observers have warned that a deluge of hateful comments misidentifying female boxer Imane Khelif in the Paris Olympics as transgender or a man could pose dangers for the LGBTQ+ community and female athletes.
The concerns come as famous figures — from former U.S. President Donald Trump to “Harry Potter” author J.K. Rowling — have railed against the Algerian boxer after her Italian competitor Angela Carini quit their bout Thursday. They and other social media comments falsely claimed Khelif was a man fighting a woman.
The comments have rippled across social media, pulling Khelif and Taiwanese boxer Lin Yu-Ting into the larger social contention about women in sports.
The International Olympic Committee spokesperson Mark Adams said Friday that Khelif “was born female, was registered female, lived her life as a female, boxed as a female, has a female passport.”
Read the latest on Algerian boxer Imane Khelif
- Who is Imane Khelif? The Algerian boxer in the middle of a divide about gender in sports had modest success before the Olympics.
- Who banned her? The banned governing body that’s fueling the massive controversy has Russian ties and a troubled history.
- Saturday’s match: Khelif meets Anna Luca Hamori of Hungary, whose boxing association planned to contest the matchup with the International Olympic Committee but still let the fight go ahead, in a quarterfinal in the women’s 66-kilogram quarterfinals
He warned “not turn it into some kind of witch hunt.”
Some athletes and LGBTQ+ observers worry that hateful comments from critics — and the IOC failing to address a larger global conversation before the Olympics — have already started to vilify transgender, nonbinary and other LGBTQ+ people at an event championing inclusion. It comes as expanding interpretations of gender identity have spurred a larger political tug-of-war, often centered around sports.
While the Paris Olympics has pushed an agenda of openness and a record 193 openly LGBTQ+ athletes are competing, a performance by drag queens during the opening ceremony faced intense backlash from religious conservatives and others contending that it mocked the Leonardo da Vinci’s “Last Supper.” Some performers and the opening ceremony’s artistic director say they have received threats.
Nikki Hiltz, one of the world’s top middle-distance runners competing in the women’s category for the U.S. Olympic team, has faced such hateful comments first hand. Assigned female at birth, Hiltz identifies as nonbinary.
“Transphobia is going crazy at these Olympics,” Hiltz wrote on a post on Instagram responding to the boxing debate. “Anti-trans rhetoric is anti-woman. These people aren’t ‘protecting women’s sport,’ they are enforcing rigid gender norms, and anyone who doesn’t fit into those norms is targeted and vilified.”
The controversy is rooted in claims by the International Boxing Association that Khelif and Lin failed unspecified and untransparent eligibility tests for women’s competition, which the IOC called “a sudden and arbitrary decision” from a governing body it has banned from the Olympics since 2019.
While some sports have detailed guidelines about transgender athletes and hormone levels in competitions, boxing is relying on rules dating to the 2016 Olympics that say the threshold for eligibility is what appears on an athlete’s passport amid a larger rift between the IBA and the IOC.
Algeria’s Imane Khelif prepares to fight Italy’s Angela Carini in their women’s 66kg preliminary boxing match at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Thursday, Aug. 1, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/John Locher)
“The current aggression against these two athletes is based entirely on this arbitrary decision (by the IBA), which was taken without any proper procedure,” said Adams of the IOC. “These dangerous, misogynistic and baseless attacks can lead to misinformation.”
Athletes have faced “quite a few cases of online aggression,” said Adams of the IOC. He said it is the responsibility of the Olympic body to “look after” the athletes and “make sure that they’re safe.”
Though some like Cyd Zeigler, co-founder of Outsports, a site that tracks LGBTQ+ participation in the Olympics, say failures by the IOC to provide clarity before the Games has hurt both female athletes and LGBTQ+ competitors, both of whom have long fought for recognition.
“The issue is not the athlete trying to compete, it’s whoever is making the policy,” Zeigler said. “The awful part of this is the vitriol over the last two days has been aimed at these athletes.”
Zeigler said the backlash is likely to stifle LGBTQ+ public participation in the Games in the future despite activists saying the Olympics have taken major strides in recent years.
“By trying to bury the issue they knew was coming, transphobic (people) begin to direct the conversation,” Zeigler said. “We can have conversations about the inclusion of trans athletes. There are thoughtful conversations to have. It is the vitriol, the nasty, horrible, graphic, ghastly language that gets used around this that eats at me.”
Former athletes like Belgium’s Charline Van Snick, 33, a former judo medalist in the 2012 Games, said the testing and comments about Khelif and Hamori’s bodies are undoing years of work by female athletes to push back against stigma.
While many say they have seen major progress in recent years, Ilona Maher, a star of the U.S. women’s rugby team, broke out in tears in a social media post before the Olympics following comments claiming she was a man.
“There are some women with more testosterone, or different kinds of body,” Van Snick said. “In judo, you are fighting, and you have to stay a woman, what is accepted of a woman. If you look too much like a man, they say, ‘Oh, she’s a man.’ But I’m a woman” who could beat a man in the sport.
Paris Olympics
- A heartbroken Caleb Dressel missed chances to defend two of his Olympic titles.
- Simone Biles, Sha’Carri Richardson and Katie Ledecky are seeking big wins today.
- Meanwhile, this millennia-old port city is hosting Olympic sailing.
- See AP’s top photos from the 2024 Paris Olympics.
- Check out the Olympic schedule of events and follow all of AP’s coverage of the Summer Games.
- Take a look at the AP’s Olympics medal tracker and list of athletes who won today.
- Want more? Sign up for our daily Postcards from Paris newsletter.
——
Associated Press videojournalist Lujain Jo contributed from Paris.
veryGood! (83)
Related
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Three-time gold medalist Misty May-Treanor to call beach volleyball at 2024 Paris Olympics
- Taylor Swift Extinguished Fire in Her New York Home During Girls’ Night With Gracie Abrams
- How New York Yankees ace Gerrit Cole fared in his 2024 debut
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- What You Need to Know About Juneteenth
- Stellantis recalls nearly 1.2 million cars over rear camera software glitch
- Baseball world reacts to the death of MLB Hall of Famer and Giants' legend Willie Mays
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Baseball legend Willie Mays, the 'Say Hey Kid,' dies at 93
Ranking
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Watch Animal Rights Awareness Week spotlight the need to improve animal welfare
- This Is Your Sign To Finally Book That Italian Girl Summer Trip You’ve Been Dying to Take
- Pittsburgh-area bicyclist electrocuted after apparently encountering downed power lines
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- How Rachel Lindsay “Completely Recharged” After Bryan Abasolo Breakup
- Nvidia tops Microsoft as the most valuable public company
- Survivors of New Hampshire motorcycle crash that killed 7 urge a judge to keep trucker off the road
Recommendation
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
‘Fancy Dance’ with Lily Gladstone balances heartbreak, humor in story of a missing Indigenous woman
North Carolina House budget gets initial OK as Senate unveils stripped-down plan
18 million Americans are house poor, new study shows
Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
U.S. halts avocado and mango inspections in a Mexican state after 2 USDA employees attacked, detained
Anouk Aimée, Oscar-nominated French actress, dies at 92
Sen. Bob Menendez buoyed by testimony of top prosecutor, former adviser in bribery trial