Paris – Five French boxers will miss the World Championships on Thursday in England due to complications with modern sex tests, which are mandatory after the fur at the Olympic Games in Paris 2024.
The French team said it was “with surprise and indignation” that his boxers cannot compete after setting the date to get the test results from England. Tests are prohibited in these sports circumstances in France by law protecting women’s privacy.
World boxing announced a compulsory test policy on May 30 as a response to controversy last year in Paris, where Imane Khelif from Algeria and Lin Yu-Tinting from Taiwan won gold medals as part of campaigns aimed at doubtful of their qualification.
Female boxers must undergo a polymerase chain reaction test (PCR) or an equivalent genetic screening test to determine their gender after birth.
The modern boxing managing body – which was not involved in the Paris Olympic Games, was temporarily recognized by the IOC in February – suggested that the French Federation was responsible for the unsuccessful term before the worlds in Liverpool.
“For boxers, it is very disappointing that some national federations were unable to complete this process on time,” World Boxing said on Thursday.
“(T) The organization explained that testing will be the responsibility of the national federations, because they have the nearest links and the most access to their boxers and it is best to prepare to manage the testing process.”
The French boxing federation said that she was told that the results could be expected “within 24 hours and because we could undoubtedly present them during the registration of our boxers.”
Five excluded boxers are Romane Moulai, Wassila Lkhadiri, Melissa Bounua, Sthlyne Grosy and Maëlys Richol.
Richol made available on her site on Instagram a message Estelle Mossly, a former candidate to run the French boxing federation, calling on officials responsible for resignation.
Khelif will also not compete in Liverpool after he does not receive the urgent period of the fleeting decision of the arbitration court regarding sport in his broader appeal against the mandate of world boxing testing.