

International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach was confronted by a reporter over the recent controversy of biological males allegedly dominating the Olympics by facing women.
The two boxers in the women’s division, Algeria’s Imane Khelif and Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting, failed a chromosome tests, but were allowed to participate.
However, President Bach claims the Olympics doesn’t have a way to identify the difference between men and women.
“If somebody is presenting us a scientifically solid system how to identify men and women, we’re the first ones to do it,” he said. “We do not like this uncertainty.”
By failing the chromosome tests, it suggests that Khelif and Yu-ting should have been disqualified.
Some media outlets have claimed Khelif suffers from a rare medical condition known as “Differences of Sex Development.”
The Cleveland Clinic defines DSD as “conditions where a person’s reproductive organs and genitals are ‘mismatched’ at birth. Examples include male chromosomes (XY) and genitalia that appears female (vulva) or female chromosomes (XX) and genitalia that appears male (penis). Some people with DSDs have characteristics of both sexes.”
The International Olympic Committee has faced serious backlash after Khelif and Lin were allowed to repeatedly punch women and dominate the Olympics.
One reporter asked whether the Olympics would be introducing such a test that proves the sex of the athletes.
Bach claims that that no such test exists.