Annet Negesa Explained

Annet Negesa
Sport:Running
Event:800 metres, 1500 metres
Birth Date:24 April 1992
Birth Place:Igamba, Uganda
Pb:800 m: 1:59.08 (2012)
1500 m: 4:09.17 (2011)

Annet Negesa (born 24 April 1992) is a Ugandan former middle-distance runner who specialised in the 800 metres. She broke Ugandan national records in the 800 m and the 1500 metres as a teenager and was a three-time national champion at the Ugandan Athletics Championships. She represented her country at the 2011 World Championships in Athletics and was the 800 m gold medallist at the 2011 All-Africa Games.

As a junior (under-20) athlete, she won a team bronze medal at the 2010 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, an 800 m bronze at the 2010 World Junior Championships in Athletics, and two gold medals at the 2011 African Junior Athletics Championships. She was named 2011 Athlete of the Year by Uganda Athletics Federation.[1]

Negesa has an XY disorder of sex development and a natural testosterone level in the male range. Under rules set by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), she had to reduce her testosterone levels in order to compete in the women's category. Negesa said the purpose of the surgery had been misrepresented to her, having been compared to an injection.[2] [3] The inadequate medical aftercare and physical and mental damage resulting from the surgery effectively ended her career. She returned to the track at the 2017 Ugandan Championships but completed the 1500 metres in 5:06.18 – nearly a minute below her best and a time which ranked her as a club level runner rather than an elite athlete.[4]

She was one of the athletes whose cases were profiled in Phyllis Ellis's 2022 documentary film Category: Woman.[5]

International competitions

2010World Cross Country ChampionshipsBydgoszcz, Poland14thJunior race19:44
3rdJunior team81 pts
World Junior ChampionshipsMoncton, Canada3rd800 m2:02.51
8th (h1)1500 m4:22.14
Commonwealth GamesNew Delhi, India4th (h3)800 m2:03.69
1500 m
4 × 400 m relay
2011IAAF World Cross Country ChampionshipsPunta Umbría, Spain66thSenior race27:56
6thSenior team148 pts
African Junior ChampionshipsGaborone, Botswanabgcolor=gold1st800 m2:04.94
bgcolor=gold1st1500 m4:09.17
World ChampionshipsDaegu, South Korea18th (sf)800 m2:01.51
All-Africa GamesMaputo, Mozambiquebgcolor=gold1st800 m2:01.81
7th1500 m4:24.32
2012African Cross Country ChampionshipsCape Town, South Africa9thSenior race27:58
3rdSenior team1:53:17
African ChampionshipsPorto-Novo, Benin6th800 m2:02.84

National titles

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://allafrica.com/stories/201202131828.html Uganda: Negesa Pips Kipsiro to 2011 Athlete of the Year Award
  2. Web site: Schwere Vorwürfe gegen IAAF-Arzt - Hintergrund - sportschau.de . www.sportschau.de . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20190929090654/https://www.sportschau.de/hintergrund/schwere-vorwuerfe-gegen-iaaf-arzt-100.html . 2019-09-29.
  3. Morgan, Tom (2019-09-27). Female athletes claim careers ruined after being 'coerced' into surgery to curb testosterone levels . The Guardian. Retrieved 2019-09-29.
  4. https://www.iaaf.org/athletes/uganda/annet-negesa-252344 Annet Negesa
  5. Elisabetta Bianchini, "'Category: Woman' documentary calls out the human rights violation of defining a woman in sports". Yahoo! News, May 9, 2022.