Female boxer give up Olympic bout with ‘organic male’ to save lots of her life

Female Italian boxer Angela Carini says she stopped her Olympic bout against her ‘biologically male’ opponent to ‘save my life’. 

The clash between the 25-year-old and her Algerian opponent Imane Khelif lasted just 46 seconds, with Carini yelling ‘this is unjust’ before she fell to canvas and wept having had her Olympic dreams snatched away from her. 

Carini was rocked by two punches from Khelif – who had been banned from a major boxing contest before the Olympics – and said the savage force of the blows made it ‘impossible to continue’.

Khelif was thrown out of last year’s world championships after failing testosterone tests carried out to establish gender qualification. 

Today’s fight in Paris is now set to become one of the most controversial in Olympic history and has thrown the Games into chaos amid a fierce backlash from the likes JK Rowling, Olympian Sharron Davies and former Prime Minister Liz Truss

Speaking out following her loss, Carini revealed she quit to ‘safeguard my life’, adding: ‘I couldn’t carry on. I have a big pain in my nose and I said, “Stop”. It’s better to avoid keeping going. My nose started dripping from the first hit.

Female Italian boxer Angela Carini (in the blue) says she stopped her Olympic bout against her ‘biologically male’ opponent Imane Khelif (right) to ‘save my life’

The clash between the 25-year-old and her Algerian opponent Imane Khelif lasted just 46 seconds, with Carini yelling ‘this is unjust’. Khelif is pictured left punching the air

With her Olympic dreams in tatters after just 46 seconds, the crestfallen Italian fighter Carini fell to her knees and wept 

‘It could be the match of my life but, in that moment, I had to safeguard my life, too. I felt to do this, I didn’t have any fear, I don’t have any fear of the ring or to get hit.

‘I fought very often in the national team. I train with my brother. I’ve always fought against men, but I felt too much pain today.’

After the match was stopped, the referee raised Khelif’s hand in the air. But a visibly furious Carini yanked her own hand away from the fight official and walked off.

Ignoring the Algerian, the Italian fighter then plunged to her knees and burst into tears as she said she had never felt such strong blows in a contest before. 

Speaking after the match, the heartbroken Italian said: ‘I’m used to suffering. I’ve never taken a punch like that, it’s impossible to continue. I’m nobody to say it’s illegal. 

‘I got into the ring to fight. But I didn’t feel like it anymore after the first minute. I started to feel a strong pain in my nose. I didn’t give up, but a punch hurt too much and so I said enough. I’m leaving with my head held high.’

She said she did not walk away from the fight as a protest against her opponent’s inclusion, but that was a decision for the Olympics to consider.

Asked why she knelt at the end of the match, she said it was for her late father, who died in 2021, before adding: ‘I am sorry not to have taken Italy on to the podium.’ 

She was taken away for medical assessment to examine the seriousness of her facial injuries which included a bruised nose.

Italy ‘s Angela Carini,25, dropped to her knees in tears after losing the fight to her Algerian opponent Imane Khelif in just 46 seconds 

The female Italian was left reeling from the cross by Algeria’s Imane Khelif (in the red) – who was previously banned from the world championships for being ‘biologically male’

Khelif is seen shouting in the ring during her controversial clash with the Italian 

 Khelif (centre) clashed with Carini in this morning’s Olympic welterweight bout

Carini appeared distraught speaking to the press following the boxing match 

Carini added: ‘I entered the ring and I told myself I have to take out all of myself independently from the person I had in front of me.

‘And honestly, I don’t care. I said to myself, ‘This is my Olympics’. Independently, from all controversy, I just wanted to carry on and win.’

‘I am not one that easily surrenders. Even if they told me, let’s not fight, I would not have accepted it.

‘I am a fighter. My father taught me to be a warrior. When I am in the ring, I use that mindset, the mindset of a warrior, a winning mindset. This time I couldn’t make it.

‘You all saw my nose that started bleeding. I didn’t lose tonight, I just surrendered with maturity.’

‘I wish her to carry on until the end and that she can be happy. I am someone who doesn’t judge anyone. I am not here to give judgements.

‘I simply entered the ring to fight and to fight for my dream. It didn’t happen. Evidently, God and my father wanted this and I accept it.

‘I am not in the position of saying this is right or wrong. I am not. I did my job as a boxer, entering the ring and fighting. I didn’t manage to, but I am exiting with my head held high and with a broken heart.

‘I am a mature woman, the ring is my life. I’ve always been very instinctive, but when I feel something is not going well, it’s not a surrender but having the maturity to stop.’

Carini (right) refused to shake her opponent’s hand after being declared the loser of the fight 

Carini’s coach in the mix zone after the fight said: ‘I don’t know if her nose is broken. I have to speak with the girl. But many people in Italy tried to call and tell her: ‘Don’t go please: it’s a man, it’s dangerous for you.’ 

After the clash, the Algerian Boxing Federation gloated about Khelif’s victory, posting on Facebook: ‘Congratulations to the Algerian boxer Iman Khalif, who responds strongly in the ring and qualifies for the quarterfinals, after defeating the Italian Angelina Carini in less than 46 seconds, effortlessly.’

Speaking as she left the ring, the Algerian boxer said: ‘God willing, this was the first victory. God is willing me to the golden one.’ 

The Algerian added: ‘Difficult for a first fight. Insh’allah (if Allah wills it) for the second fight. I am very prepared because it’s been eight years of preparation. It’s my second Olympic Games after fifth place at Tokyo.

‘I need an Olympic medal here in Paris.

‘We will see who will win the second fight to know who will be the opponent.

‘We will be ready and we will do everything to bring back a medal for Algeria. One, two, three, viva Algeria.’

She declined to comment on the controversial decision to include her in the Olympics

Bosses at the IOC are now facing a furious backlash following the fight, with former Prime Minister Liz Truss blasting the clash.

Writing on Twitter, the former Tory MP said: ‘When will this madness stop? Men cannot become women. Why is the British Government not objecting to this?’

British Olympic hero Sharron Davies also waded into the controversy, raging: ‘This is shocking. The IOC are a bloody disgrace. In effect legalising beating up females. This must stop!!! What the hell’s the matter with them?’

While Harry Potter author JK Rowling branded the contest ‘insanity’. In a post yesterday, the gender-critical author wrote: ‘What will it take to end this insanity? A female boxer left with life-altering injuries? A female boxer killed?’ 

Posting a video of the fight today, the author added: ‘Watch this (whole thread), then explain why you’re OK with a man beating a woman in public for your entertainment. This isn’t sport. From the bullying cheat in red all the way up to the organisers who allowed this to happen, this is men revelling in their power over women.’

The Italian fighter (in the blue) refused the handshake and fell to the canvas and appeared to wipe away a tear. Winner Khelif is pictured in the red as her opponent leaves the ring

The controversial clash in the ring was over in less than a minute with the Algerian fighter clinching the victory

Algeria’s Imane Khelif (in red) leaves after her victory in this morning’s Olympic boxing match 

Carini is an Italian police officer with the Fiamme Oro.

Her mantra is: ‘Boxing is a sport that teaches you to have respect for your opponent. It can be a weapon in life, but only for defence. It cannot and must not become an abuse. Like any sport, it can instead become a vehicle for venting anger and pain.’

Khelif was thrown out of last year’s world championships after failing testosterone tests carried out to establish gender qualification. 

But despite her gender test problems, she was admitted to the Olympics amid a huge furore.

Olympics officials at Paris 2024 have accepted her as a female and state so in her official games biography.

Another female boxer Lin Yu-ting of Taiwan was also disqualified from the 2023 women’s boxing world championships for failing a gender eligibility test.

Former world featherweight champion Barry McGuigan – now president of the Professional Boxing Association – said it was a ‘shocking’ and ‘pathetic’ decision to allow ‘a man’ to fight women.

Umar Kremlev, president of the International Boxing Association (IBA) has said after a series of DNA-tests the association ‘uncovered athletes who were trying to fool their colleagues and pretended to be women.

Kremlev claimed that the tests ‘proved they had XY chromosomes and were thus excluded from the sports events.’

Italy’s sports minister Andrea Abodi raised concerns about Khelif competing, but Angela Carini was on record as saying that ‘respect’ of her opponents was her mantra.

Algeria’s Olympic Committee condemned as ‘baseless’ the attacks on their boxer after questions were raised over her participation at the Paris Olympics.

Carini (pictured) is pictured relaxing before her fight against the Algerian 

The Italian fighter (pictured in an Instagram photo) said she had never experienced a punch so hard

The match has since plunged the Olympics into farce as a gender row threatens to explode at the Paris games (Carini is pictured)

But Khelif, who competed at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, only fell into controversy after failing the tests last year in New Delhi.

She received resounding applause from staunch Algerian supporters as she entered the ring, but there were several boos.

At 5’10 and two inches taller than her police officer opponent, Khelif showed off her power with a series of powerful punches early in the three round contest.

But it was over in less than a minute.

Italian officials had already protested the inclusion of the Algerian and Olympic officials were assessing how to deal with further controversies surrounding the Algerian as she fights her way towards a medal.

Carini’s father also served in the police, but was injured in an accident when she was a toddler and had to use a wheelchair for the rest of his life.

Speaking in 2020, she said: ‘My father is my hero. I am very attached to him, he taught me that in life you should never give up. And when I’m in the ring and the situation gets tough, I hear his example, I never give up.

Carini, 25,  from Naples, Italy, lost her clash in less than a minute 

The fight comes after DNA tests, which are compulsory for boxers, revealed the presence of XY chromosomes, typical of the male sex, in Khelif’s DNA (Khelif is pictured)

Imane Khelif is pictured in the centre during a training session before the Olympics 

‘When he was paralysed I was only two years old. I grew up on his legs, he never made me miss anything. I have never seen him as a different father from the others, the chair on which he is sitting has never divided us, quite the contrary.’

Her father died away in 2021, a few days after her Olympic debut at the delayed Tokyo 2020 Games, and she considered quitting the sport.

‘I didn’t want to box without my dad anymore. But I came back because I owe it to him. He has always been by my side and now we fight together.’

The clash comes amid a gender storm at the Olympics over ‘biologically male’ fighters competing in the female divisions. 

IOC bosses overseeing the Olympics in Paris said Khelif met the eligibility criteria to compete – despite concerns of the boxer’s biological sex. 

Following last year’s ban, the Algerian Olympic Committee hit back, claiming the disqualification was part of a ‘conspiracy’ to stop them from winning a gold meal and said ‘medical reasons’ were behind high testosterone levels. 

After the disqualification, Mexico’s Brianda Tamara came forward with her own experience of fighting Khelif earlier in the tournament.

‘When I fought with her I felt very out of my depth,’ she wrote on X. ‘Her blows hurt me a lot, I don’t think I had ever felt like that in my 13 years as a boxer, nor in my sparring with men. Thank God that day I got out of the ring safely, and it’s good that they finally realized.’

Also given the green light to fight is Lin Yu-Ting of Taiwan, who was also thrown out of the world championships amid questions about their sex. 

According to feminist website Reduxx, both are thought both are impacted by a Difference of Sexual Development (DSD), a series of medical conditions identified at birth where genitalia is atypical in relation to chromosomes.

Khelif of Team Algeria makes her way to the ring prior to her Women’s 66kg preliminary round match against Angela Carini

Khelif is seen landing a stiff jab on her Italian opponent during the opening round of the fight 

Khelif’s hand was not shaken by her Italian opponent, who walked away after the result was revealed 

McGuigan is among those questioning the situation. ‘It’s shocking that they were actually allowed to get this far, what is going on?’ he wrote on X.

Elsewhere, Nancy Hogshead – the American swimmer who won three golds at the 1984 Games, waded into the row, claiming that ‘gender ideology will get women KILLED’.

Hogshead wrote: ‘Imane Khelif of Algeria and Lin Yu-Ting of Taiwan are scheduled to compete in women’s Olympic boxing – despite being disqualified last year for having XY chromosomes, the male phenotype. Let’s remind ourselves that males – however they identify – pack a punch that is 162 per cent more powerful than women – THE biggest performance gap between men and women. Gender ideology will get women KILLED.’

One X user added: ‘Men punching women is now officially an Olympic sport’.

An IOC spokesperson said: ‘All athletes participating in the boxing tournament comply with the competition’s eligibility and entry regulations, as well as all applicable medical regulations, in accordance with the Paris 2024 Boxing Unit.’

But Olympic chiefs’ decisions to ditch rules on gender testing for athletes have been branded ‘crazy’ by critics.

Speaking to MailOnline sports scientist Professor Ross Tucker said: ‘Would you allow a 90kg fighter to fight against a 60kg fighter? 

‘Because that’s more or less what the difference is in strength and power between male and female boxers.’

Tests on both Khelif and Yu-Ting revealed XY chromosomes in their systems. 

Lin Yu-Ting of Taiwan (left) will join Khelif in competing at the Paris Olympics this summer

Rare ‘intersex’ medical conditions, medically known as differences in sexual development (DSDs), can also mean outwardly female individuals can have ‘male’ chromosomes, or vice versa. 

What are differences in sex development (DSD) or being intersex?

Intersex is an umbrella term for multiple of conditions that mean a person’s sexual anatomy is different than most other people’s.

Also called ‘differences in sex development’ (DSD) these are rare conditions that develop in the womb.

They are normally spotted at birth but occasionally only come to light later in life during puberty.

They involve a combination of genes, hormones and the layout and appearance of reproductive anatomy like the genitals.

For example, a girl might be born with a long clitoris but a closed vagina due to a hormonal condition.

In other cases, a boy may be born with a penis but have a womb and internal, rather regular external, testicles.

Some of these traits are linked to having extra chromosome like Klinefelter syndrome.

There is some evidence that some DSDs can run in families but in most cases, there is no obvious cause.

People with DSDs have sometimes been subjected to shocking medical treatment.

So-called ‘corrective surgeries’ were sometimes used to ‘fix’ babies’ genitalia to better match one sex.

For example, male babies born without a penis, a DSD called aphallia, have sometimes been subjected to ‘feminisation surgery’ to create an artificial vagina.

This has resulted, historically, in people being raised as girls but then growing facial hair and developing a deeper voice when their male puberty starts.

DSD charities have also criticised this ‘corrective ‘approach as it usually driven by societal expectations rather than medical benefit for the patient.

People with very specific DSDs do need medical care however, as there can be knock-on effects to other aspects of their health.

However, the vast majority do not need any medical attention.

How common DSDs are vary by type, with more than 40 individual conditions covered by the term.

A rough estimate is that 1.7 per cent of the population, about one in 50 people are born with a type of DSD.

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Speaking yesterday International Olympic Committee spokesperson Mark Adams said: ‘Everyone competing in the women’s category is complying with the competition eligibility rules.’

He added: ‘They are women in their passports and it’s stated that this is the case, that they are female.’

Sports scientists told MailOnline that an absence of clear policy by the Olympics in this area had allowed the bizarre situation to develop.

Prior to 2021, the IOC set thresholds for the maximum amount of testosterone — the ‘male’ sex hormone — competitors in women’s events could have. These were picked up in blood tests, similar to ones for doping. 

Rules on testosterone limits had been previosuly brought into sharp focus by the very public and famous case of Caster Semenya.

Semenya has a condition which means her body naturally produces higher levels of testosterone than normal for women.

She became unable to compete at Tokyo in 2020 after World Athletics brought in new rules independently of the IOC at the time. 

IOC’s own testosterone monitoring policies were halted three years ago and replaced with a policy of ‘fairness, inclusion and non-discrimination on the basis of gender identify and sex variation’. 

The IOC now provides individual sporting bodies in every country with ‘ten guiding principles’ they can use to make their own policies.

This controversial document states that athletes with ‘sex variations’, another term for DSDs, have ‘no presumption of advantage’ and that they should be allowed to compete in the category of their gender identity.

There are exceptions, with framework stating that an ‘evidence-based approach’ can be used to exclude athletes who have a ‘consistent unfair disproportionate advantage’ or if there is an ‘unpreventable risk’ to the safety of other athletes.

However, some sport scientists say that, by themselves, these guidelines are wooly and open to interpretation.  

Federations that govern rugby, track and field, swimming and cycling have all introduced rules in some form to address biological males in women’s sport, though the exact details of policies vary.

And boxing did as well, with the International Boxing Association (IAB) requiring athletes to undergo ‘gender assessment’.

Though it doesn’t detail the exact nature of these assessments, it is this test that Khelif and Lin failed last year at the IAB’s Women’s World Boxing Championships in New Delhi.

At the time IBA president, Umar Kremlev, claimed the tests had proven both Khelif and Lin ‘had XY chromosomes’. 

He added that they ‘uncovered athletes who were trying to fool their colleagues and pretend to be women’. 

Under these same rules and test results Khelif and Lin wouldn’t be able to compete this Olympics, but the IAB was stripped of its role in governing the sport for the Paris games by the IOC due to problems with the latter’s governance.

The IOC created via a new body, the Paris Boxing Unit (PBU), to determine eligibility for competitors. 

Documents from the PBU make no mention of gender or sex testing for male or female events, though they do set limits for the age of competitors, a passport being an acceptable ID for athletes and requiring boxers in the women’s category to declare if they are pregnant. 

Defending its decision to approve Khelif and Lin as women the IOC’s Mr Adams added: ‘These athletes have competed many times before for many years. They haven’t just suddenly arrived.’

But sports scientist Professor Tucker, said the absence of clear policy by the IOC in this area had allowed this situation to occur. 

‘Last year [Khelif and Lin] did not meet eligibility requirements and the only reason they do now is the body that did rule them ineligible has been moved aside,’ he said. 

‘It’s due to a vacuum of policy, there’s no policy now.’