When the Algerian athlete Imane Khelif won boxing gold at the 2024 Olympics, it marked the end of a journey that began long before the female fighter arrived in Paris.
Her win was controversial, as it followed a gender-eligibility row relating to previous failed gender tests over the 2023 world championships, which were run by the International Boxing Association (IBA).
Khelif and another boxer who failed the same tests at the same time (Taiwan's Lin Yu-ting) were allowed to compete in Paris by the International Olympic Committee (IOC), but it caused upset, not least among some of her opponents.
That is because the IOC runs the boxing competition at the Games directly, after the IBA was removed as amateur boxing’s governing body in 2019, and it appears to have different gender-eligibility criteria.
When Khelif fought Angela Carini, the Italian contender abandoned the fight after just 46 seconds. An experience fighter, she said Khelif’s punches were the hardest she had ever faced, hurting “like never before”.
Heated debate
The row became one of the biggest talking points of the Games, flying head-first into a wider culture war that has been marked by bias, misinformation, and lies.
Chasing her dreams of gold, Khelif found herself at the centre of this heated debate being played out in the media and on social networks, with uproar after the match.
The controversy was far from fair: it did not live up to the standards associated with the highest levels of sport, and besides, there is perfect clarity over the rules that all involved must follow.