South African officials withhold findings of Caster Semenya’s gender test

London, Sep. 19 (ANI): Even before South African star athlete Caster Semenya’s gender was questioned at the World Championships in Berlin, Athletics South Africa (ASA) had found out and withheld the fact that she had internal testes, an e-mail exchange has revealed.

According to the e-mail exchanges published in the Mail and Guardian newspaper, ASA officials were aware of the findings of a Pretoria clinic that Semenya had internal testes and produced abnormal amounts of testosterone for a woman, Times Online reports.

It was ASA’s chief medical officer and team doctor, Harold Adams, who had suggested the need carrying out the tests on Semenya, 18, because of her deep voice, muscular body and facial hair, which later became a subject of controversy in Berlin.

Another email exchange shows that Adams later suggested that the results to be kept confidential while the South African team was in Berlin.

“Thinking about the current confidential matter, I would suggest we make the following decisions. 1. We get a gynae opinion and take it to Berlin. 2. We do nothing and I will handle these issues if they come up in Berlin,” the report quoted from Dr Adams’ email to ASA President Leonard Chuene and General Manager Molatelo Malehopo, as saying.

Following the IAAF establishing that Semenya was a hermaphrodite, South African officials not only angrily denounced it, but also denied carrying out their own tests.

Taking matters a step further, South African Sports Minister Makhenkesi Stofile lost his temper at a press conference and threatened to start a “third world war” if Semenya was banned from international competition because of her gender.

Earlier, Semenya’s ex-coach Wilfred Daniels had said the ASA had duped Semenya into thinking the gender test carried out on her were routine drug tests. (ANI)

India’s Red Chery plans to cross swords with BlackBerry

India’s Red Chery plans to cross swords with BlackBerryMadurai, May 28 (IANS) The little-known maker of Red Chery – a mobile application used for receiving mails from free and corporate e-mail accounts – is dreaming big: eating into a market straddled by BlackBerry of Canada’s Research In Motion and other similar service providers.

To make this happen, the Rs.15-crore software product company, AJ Square Consultancy, is banking on an aggressive pricing strategy, and hoping to rope in two million (20 lakh) subscribers by this fiscal-end.

“With an average revenue per subscriber of Rs.110 per annum, which is about a tenth of what existing players charge, we hope to earn around Rs.22 crore from 20 lakh subscribers by the end of this fiscal. We may even offer this service free at a later stage,” AJ Square managing director Boaz Augustin told reporters here Thursday.

Like other similar products, Red Chery is a mobile application used for receiving mails from any of the free e-mail accounts (yahoo, gmail, hotmail and rediffmail) and corporate e-mail accounts (MS exchange and IBM Lotus servers) on a mobile handset.

“Red Chery is platform, telecom and mobile instrument independent. One can read e-mails like a short messaging services,” Augustin added.

AJ Square will be focussing on the corporate sector to push Red Chery.

According to Augustin, the company will offer services in Singapore and Europe once it stabilises its Indian operations and gets venture capital to the tune of $25 million. “We are open to dilute up to 45 percent stake.”

The 200-employee Madurai-based AJ Square is into development of e-commerce and gaming software for European companies.