In a revelation that should surprise absolutely no one paying attention, a newly published sex-test confirms that Olympic gold medalist Imane Khelif — the Algerian boxer who bulldozed her female competition in Paris — is, in fact, biologically male.
Independent journalist Alan Abrahamson, writing Sunday for 3 Wire Sports, released the 2023 results of Khelif’s sex verification test. The findings were about as subtle as a right hook: “Chromosome analysis reveals Male karyotype.”
The report, conducted by India’s Dr. Lal PathLabs — an accredited and internationally certified lab — did not mince words. The result was categorized as “abnormal,” confirming that Khelif has XY chromosomes, internal testes, and a condition known as 5-alpha reductase type-2 deficiency. If that term sounds vaguely familiar, it’s the same biological trait that differentiates male from female — you know, that thing society used to acknowledge before pretending otherwise.
On top of the chromosomal evidence, previous reporting from French outlet Le Correspondant revealed Khelif had a testosterone level of 14.7 — nearly five times higher than the maximum range for women, which caps around 3. And yes, this was all known long before the boxer stepped into the Olympic ring.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) had this data. They approved her to fight women anyway.
As Abrahamson put it bluntly, “Unless someone manipulates the evidence, the result is going to be crystal clear.” That’s because similar DNA tests in both 2022 and 2023 confirmed the same result: male chromosomes, male markers, male aggression — and yet somehow, a green light to compete in women’s boxing.
Let’s not forget how this played out in the ring. Khelif’s July 2024 match against Italian fighter Angela Carini ended in 46 seconds after a brutal beatdown. That wasn’t competition — that was carnage. And still, the IOC looked the other way.
Unfortunately, this sort of institutional blindness isn’t new. From COVID mandates to media coverups of Joe Biden’s cognitive decline, we’ve entered an era where “conspiracy theories” just need time to mature into headline news.
Critics of Khelif’s participation were called bigots. They were accused of lacking “compassion” and ignoring “gender diversity.” But as it turns out, they were simply stating what biology — and now, official lab results — confirm.
In a sane world, this story would be an international scandal. But given the current political climate, don’t expect anyone at the IOC to admit fault. Instead, the same activists and bureaucrats who put ideology before fairness will likely do what they always do: pretend the facts don’t exist.
But for the women who stepped into the ring with Khelif, the bruises — physical and institutional — are all too real.