World U-18 800m Champion Wambui, Kahega Out Of Doha Worlds Over Testosterone
20th September 2019
The two have fallen foul of rules which have led to a long stand-off between South African two-time Olympic champion Caster Semenya and the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF)
- Jackline Wambui, who won the 800m in Kenyan trials last week with a personal best time of 1min 58.79sec, and Linda Kahega, who came third in the 400m, had both qualified for the world championships
- It is too late for the two athletes to be replaced, and Kenya will thus only be represented by only Hellen Syombua and Mary Moraa in the 400m and by Eunice Sum in the 800m
- The most famous victim of the rule is Semenya, who is refusing to take the medication and will thus not take part in Doha
NAIROBI, Kenya- Two female Kenyan
middle-distance runners have been dropped from the team for this month's IAAF
World championships in Doha due to high levels of testosterone, Athletics Kenya
said Friday.
Jackline Wambui, who won the 800m in Kenyan
trials last week with a personal best time of 1min 58.79sec, and Linda Kahega,
who came third in the 400m, had both qualified for the world championships.
The two have fallen foul of rules which
have led to a long stand-off between South African two-time Olympic 800m
champion Caster Semenya and the International Association of Athletics
Federations (IAAF).
READ MORE: IAAF Hails Court Ruling BarringSemenya From Doha 2019 Worlds
Blood tests showed the two Kenyan runners
had testosterone levels higher than
allowed by the IAAF, said Paul Mutwii, Athletics Kenya's vice-president in
charge of competitions.
"All the females athletes in the team
(for Doha world championships) were subjected to the blood tests after the
national trials in Nairobi on September 13, and the doctors found that both
Wambui and Kageha had high levels of testosterone," Mutwii told AFP.
"As a result they cannot compete in
Doha as the new IAAF decision rules out female athletes with high levels of
testosterone from competing in events from 400m to the mile."
It is too late for the two athletes to be
replaced, and Kenya will thus only be represented by only Hellen Syombua and
Mary Moraa in the 400m and by Eunice Sum in the 800m.
In May, another two Kenyan athletes
Maximilla Imali and Evangeline Makena were dropped from the team for the IAAF
World Relays championship in Japan after blood tests showed high levels of
testosterone.
READ MORE: The Government Inspector:Cheruiyot Now Inspired For Doha Gold After Work Promotion
The new IAAF rules came into force on May 8
and oblige women higher than normal male hormone levels -- so-called
"hyperandrogenic" athletes -- to artificially lower their
testosterone to run at some distances.
The most famous victim of the rule is
Semenya, who is refusing to take the medication and will thus not take part in
Doha.