Algerian boxer Khelif 'not intimidated' by Trump, eyes second Olympic gold in LA

Algerian gold medallist boxer Imane Khelif attends the Bottega Veneta collection show at Milan's Fashion Week Womenswear Spring / Summer 2025, on September 21, 2024 in Milan. (Photo by Gabriel BOUYS / AFP)
Algerian Olympic boxing champion Imane Khelif, at
the centre of a gender row at the Paris Games, is targeting a second gold in
Los Angeles and says she will not be intimidated by Donald Trump.
The US president last month signed an executive
order barring transgender women from competing in the female categories of
sports.
Trump had previously said the 25-year-old fighter
had transitioned from being a man, even though that is not the case.
"I will give you a straightforward answer --
the US president issued a decision related to transgender policies in
America," she told Britain's ITV News.
"I am not transgender. This does not concern
me, and it does not intimidate me. That is my response."
Olympic chiefs earlier this week recommended that
boxing be included at the 2028 Games in LA after a new governing body was
provisionally recognised.
The decision still needs to be rubber-stamped by a
full session of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) this week in Greece.
"Second gold medal, of course," said
Khelif. "In America, Los Angeles."
She added: "This experience has taught me a
lot. I believe that if the old Imane operated at 50 percent of her potential,
then the Imane Khalif of today is even more motivated and determined.
"I have learned so much from this campaign
against me, and what happened at the Paris Olympics was an eye-opening
experience. I feel even stronger now than I was before."
Khelif's triumph in Paris, along with that of Taiwan's
Lin Yu-ting, sparked a raging gender eligibility debate, with high-profile
figures such as Trump and Elon Musk weighing in.
She revealed she was "deeply affected
mentally" by the "major media campaign" surrounding her, and
said her mother was attending hospital almost daily as her family shared the
brunt of the attacks.
Khelif and Lin were disqualified from the
International Boxing Association's 2023 world championships after the
organisation, the long-standing governing body of amateur boxing, said they had
failed gender eligibility tests.
The IOC has severed links with the IBA over
financial, governance and ethical concerns. The IBA is led by the
Kremlin-linked Russian Umar Kremlev.
Last month the IOC provisionally recognised World
Boxing as the body to oversee the sport at future Games.
"As we say in Algeria, those who have nothing
to hide should have no fear," Khelif told ITV. "The truth became
clear at the Paris Olympics -- the injustice was exposed and later, the truth
was acknowledged by the Olympic Committee in Paris."
She added: "For me, I see myself as a girl,
just like any other girl. I was born a girl, raised as a girl, and have lived
my entire life as one.
"I have competed in many tournaments, including
the Tokyo Olympics and other major competitions, as well as four world
championships.
"All of these took place before I started
winning and earning titles. But once I began achieving success, the campaigns against
me started."
The debate over transgender athletes and athletes
with differences in sex development (DSD) in women's sport has been a central
issue in the ongoing IOC presidential race, which concludes on Thursday.
The three leading candidates -– Juan Antonio
Samaranch Junior, Sebastian Coe and Kirsty Coventry -- have spoken of the need
to "protect the women's category".
World Athletics president Coe told AFP in an
interview last year: "If we do not protect women's sport and we don't have
a clear and unambiguous set of policies to do that, then we run the risk of
losing women's sport."
Khelif said: "I hope the next president of the
IOC leads with true sportsmanship, stays committed to Olympic principles, and
upholds the values of fair play."
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