
The 24-year-old is one of several star female athletes affected
by an International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) ruling this
month that requires women with high levels of testosterone to take medication
to suppress it.
Seated at a dirt-track stadium at the foot of the Ngong
Hills outside Nairobi where she trains, Wambui has just returned from a
disappointing sixth-place finish in the 800m at the Doha Diamond League.
She was meant to leave for the IAAF World Challenge athletics
meeting in Nanjing next week, but now her future is one big question mark.
"I am very disappointed, I don't feel even like going
on with the training because you don't know what you are training for,"
she told AFP.
For about a decade Semenya has been the symbol of a furious
debate worldwide about questions of gender, women with elevated testosterone,
and physical advantage.
However other athletes such as Wambui, who finished third
behind Semenya in the 800m at the 2016 Rio Olympics, and the silver medallist
from Burundi, Francine Niyonsaba, are also affected.
The IAAF has maintained that the rules are necessary for
fair competition, arguing that athletes with high levels of testosterone
benefit from increased bone and muscle strength similar to men who have gone
through puberty.
However critics highlight that the very nature of elite
athletic success is down to one physical advantage or another, such as swimmers
with disproportionately big hands or feet, or basketball players who are taller
than the average person.
"Why, when you have a high level of testosterone in
men, you are likely to perform well and we celebrate that? But when it comes to
women we have to tell them to lower it and we draw them out of competition.
Why?" asked Wambui.
"Why don't we take maybe men with low testosterone and
categorise them as women?"
Wambui said simply switching to another distance like
5,000m was not possible, with different skills and training needed that would
take years to reach elite level.
"I am not going to take medication because I am not
sick and ... those are chemicals you are putting in your body, you don't know
how it will affect you later," she said.
She said that maybe the idea of having different categories
of runners - comparing it to boxing, where heavyweights don't fight flyweights
- might be "a good idea to make it fair."
Wambui grew up in Kenya's central highlands in the town of
Nyeri, and began running in primary school. She was thrust into the spotlight
when she won a gold medal at the 2014 IAAF world junior championships and has
since established herself as one of the world's top two-lap runners.
Running is "something in me, in my blood, it is
something I cannot do without. Now they are telling us we can't compete, we
just feel rejected. We are just natural, we did not dope."
Wambui, who is tall and muscular, with braided hair and a
shy smile, said she had never faced questions about her gender or appearance
until the IAAF began cracking down on women with elevated testosterone.
She said she had been forced to undergo blood tests for
doping, but did not know when she had been specifically tested for testosterone
levels.
"I am worried now about my career," she said,
adding that the ruling had also heaped pressure on her family, for whom she is
the only breadwinner.
When she is not training, she is a police officer, and
works for Kenya's prison service.
Last week Athletics Kenya dropped 100m and 200m champion
Maximilla Imali and 400m runner Evangeline Makena from the team for the IAAF
World Relays event in Japan over their high levels of testosterone.
South Africa plans to appeal the latest IAAF ruling. The IAAF argues its ruling is aimed at creating a
"level playing field" and denies accusations it was targeted
specifically at Semenya.
Wambui said that while Semenya had become a cause celebre
in South Africa, fiercely defended by politicians and citizens, she herself had
received no support from the Kenyan government.
Athletics Kenya official Barnabas Korir told AFP the body
supports the IAAF ruling.
"This has been a simmering issue especially with our
very own athletes having complained about running with these women with excess
testosterone," he said.
"We have to be realistic that these athletes have had
an advantage over the others." Sowetan
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