Transgender weightlifter thanks IOC for 'commitment to making sport inclusive and accessible'

Transgender weightlifter Laurel Hubbard is in Japan for the Tokyo Games and thanked the International Olympic Committee on Friday for helping to make it possible for her to compete.

Laurel Hubbard is a medal contender in women's over-87 kilogram weightlifting competition

New Zealand weightlifter Laurel Hubbard is set to make history at the Tokyo Olympics as the first transgender athlete to compete at an Olympic Games. (Paul Childs/Reuters)

Transgender weightlifter Laurel Hubbard is in Japan for the Tokyo Games and thanked the International Olympic Committee on Friday for helping to make it possible for her to compete.

Hubbard has been a focus for support and criticism since qualifying for the Tokyo Olympics. She is a medal contender in the women's over-87 kilogram weightlifting category on Monday.

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Weightlifter will be 1st transgender athlete to compete at Olympics

3 years ago
Duration 1:59
New Zealand’s Laurel Hubbard will be the first transgender athlete to compete in the Olympics, but her historic achievement comes with controversy.

"The Olympic Games are a global celebration of our hopes, our ideals and our values. I commend the IOC for its commitment to making sport inclusive and accessible," Hubbard said in comments provided by the New Zealand Olympic Committee (NZOC).

NZOC secretary-general Kereyn Smith said Hubbard arrived in Tokyo a couple of days ago.

"I just bumped into her at lunch and we understand that she's comfortable," Smith said.

"She's getting ready. She well understands the size of the stage and is very grateful to be able to compete in this environment."

The IOC in 2015 drew up a set of recommendations for including transgender athletes. Many sports bodies, including the International Weightlifting Federation, have implemented similar policies based on the IOC recommendations. Different sports are allowed to set their own specific policies.

The IOC signalled it will release a new "framework" for transgender athletes' eligibility, taking into account newer scientific studies. That will form a basis for sports to draw up their own updated policies.

IOC medical director Richard Budgett said the organization was funding research into the effects of transitioning. Current IOC guidelines require athletes to demonstrate low testosterone levels for 12 months before a first competition.

"We funded some of those [studies] based particularly importantly on individuals who are transgender and seeing what the effect of transitioning actually has on their performance, because that's what we really need to know," Budgett said.

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