ITV ‘censored' Martina Navratilova for claiming boxer Imane Khelif was male
ITV has been accused of 'censoring' Martina Navratilova for stating a controversial boxer was male.
Dozens of other comments were also 'hidden' from the broadcaster's X feed after it posted a story about Imane Khelif, the boxer who won a gold medal after being allowed to compete in the women's event at last year's Olympic Games.
Earlier this week, Khelif was banned from women's boxing by the regulator, World Boxing. A leaked blood test showed the Olympian has male XY chromosomes.
ITV later published a story headlined 'Naming Imane Khelif has caused 'immeasurable psychological damage'' after the Algerian Boxing Federation complained about World Boxing's decision to name the boxer.
Ms Navratilova, the nine-time Wimbledon singles champion who has campaigned for gay rights, commented: 'But a male beating the crap out of women is not too bad, apparently.'
This comment was hidden by the broadcaster and reinstated only after users complained.
Dozens of other comments remain hidden, even though many of them simply state that the boxer is male.
Credit: ITV
Fiona McAnena, the director of campaigns at the women's rights charity Sex Matters, demanded an apology from ITV.
She said: 'It's shocking that the UK's largest commercial broadcast network has censored hundreds of gender-critical comments on social media, many of them simply referring to Imane Khelif as male.
'Hiding a simple truth about a major news story is a remarkable failure by a journalistic organisation.
'It's scandalous that ITV hid a reply from tennis legend Martina Navratilova, which they reinstated after an outcry. But what of the hundreds of other replies that remain censored, some of which do nothing but quote JK Rowling about the boxing row?
'ITV cannot simply dismiss this as a social media storm. Unless ITV's leadership apologises for hiding factual comments from the public, it will damage its credibility as a respected news organisation.'
Khelif won a gold medal at last year's Paris Olympics after being allowed to compete in the women's event even though the boxer had previously been disqualified from the 2023 World Championships when tests indicated the presence of male chromosomes.
Earlier this week, World Boxing banned Khelif from fighting against women in the Eindhoven World Cup, unless the champion underwent a sex test, which was refused.
Users of the social platform X can hide responses they do not like, meaning they do not automatically appear in people's feeds. But they cannot delete them, and followers can look at hidden responses if they choose.
Dozens of other commenters were hidden for stating that the boxer was male.
One, Hatkeshiator, said: 'It's hardly worse than pretending to be a chick so you can beat chicks up while they fear a ban if they complain. Get a grip.'
Kyle Reese, another X user, wrote: 'I think the damage his mentally-ill man inflicted on women was far greater.'
Florence Jeffries said: 'He punches women. What about the harm, physical and mental, suffered by them. He knows tests have shown him to have XY chromosomes.'
Another commenter with the username Spacedonkey wrote: 'ITV has proven that trans ideology is misogynistic. ITV literally wants to silence women and has hidden a post by sports icon Martina Navratilova. ITV, how low can you sink?'
Rebecca Marian said: 'Sending female boxers into the ring to box against a male could have resulted in life changing injuries or death for the women I frankly don't give a stuff for Khelif's 'psychological damage' He should never have been there.'
A commenter called Steve wrote: 'Keep hiding the replies – you're a disgrace. The women he cheated against matter so much more than his so-called fragile mental state.'
One was hidden for retweeting a comment by JK Rowling, who said: 'The media had all the evidence they needed, but chose to distort, obscure, and deflect because reality was politically inconvenient. They said Khelif was female. They were wrong. They said concerns were bigoted. They were wrong.'
An ITV source claimed they used an automated moderation system, adding: 'It was initially set to a very strict moderation threshold, but has now been adjusted to be less stringent.'
The broadcaster denied that comments had been selectively hidden.
ITV have been approached for comment.
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Associated Press
19 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Olympics' champion: New IOC president Kirsty Coventry inaugurated to start 8-year leadership
LAUSANNE, Switzerland (AP) — The first female and first African president of the IOC, Kirsty Coventry was inaugurated in the role Monday on the organization's 131st birthday with praise that the Olympic movement was 'in the best of hands.' Coventry, a two-time Olympic gold medalist in swimming for Zimbabwe, finally and formally takes office Tuesday aged just 41 after decisively winning a seven-candidate election in March to succeed Thomas Bach. Coventry cited her family including her two young daughters as 'my rocks, my inspiration' to lead the International Olympic Committee through the next eight years including the 2028 Summer Games in Los Angeles. 'You are my constant reminders of why we do what we do every single day,' Coventry said, addressing six-year-old Ella seated near the front of the ceremony 'You are a constant reminder of why this movement is relevant, why it needs to change, why we need to embrace the new ways,' the new president said. 'And you will be a constant reminder for many years to come on the decisions that we all take together.' Coventry said Olympic leaders were 'guardians of a platform ... to inspire, to change lives, to bring hope.' Bach's voice had cracked with emotion minutes earlier as he handed over a symbolic key to the presidency to his protégé in Olympic politics. The 71-year-old German lawyer, an Olympic champion in team fencing in 1976, leaves after the maximum 12 years in an office he said was now in the 'best of hands' with Coventry. 'I believe with all my heart that the Olympic movement is ready for the future,' said Bach, adding he had 'given all I could' to the IOC and the games. The ceremony took place in a temporary building in the gardens of Olympic House designed in the style of the Grand Palais in Paris that hosted fencing and taekwondo at the Summer Games last year. A steamy, humid day at the IOC's lakeside modern headquarters saw a sudden downpour of rain minutes before the scheduled start. It forced Bach and Coventry to shelter under a shared umbrella as they walked from the villa that was the former Olympic home. The hour-long ceremony included a four-minute montage of tributes to Bach, who now becomes the IOC's honorary president. He has expressed a wish to counsel his successor. Coventry's first day at the office features a closed-door session to hear the views of around 100 IOC members. They include current and former heads of state, business leaders and billionaires, past and current Olympic athletes, plus leaders of Olympic sports. ___ AP Olympics:


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Women's tennis players have testy exchange at net following match in Germany
Bad blood spilled over in Bad Homburg on Sunday when Greece's Maria Sakkari and Kazakhstan's Yulia Putintseva were involved in a center court confrontation after their first-round match. Sakkari emerged with a 7-5, 7-6 (6) victory in the Wimbledon tuneup event in Germany but appeared less than pleased with Putintseva's handshake at the net. "When you shake hands with someone, look them in the eyes," Sakkari said in comments picked up by the court microphone. Putintseva responded with an exaggerated curtsy, with Sakkari then telling the Kazakh: "Just be like a human being." The duo continued to exchange barbs as Putintseva left for the changing rooms, and world No. 85 Sakkari told an on-court interviewer there was no love lost between the pair. "I don't think she's going to invite me for dinner for the rest of our lives, but I don't care," Sakkari said. "I have very good friends and I'll go to dinner with them. Let me leave it here, and just say that I have respect for her as a player, but that's it." Sakkari will next meet either Ekaterina Alexandrova or Belinda Bencic, as she continues her preparations for Wimbledon, which begins on June 30.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
4 theories on why there's so many NBA Achilles tears lately
The 2024-25 NBA season will be remembered for so much -- the Oklahoma City Thunder's first title in the city (we're not counting the Sonics' ring), the Indiana Pacers' incredible run that fell short in a Game 7 of the NBA Finals and beyond. But there's also the rash of Achilles woes that's led to eight players to suffer the devastating injuries this season: names like Tyrese Haliburton, Jayson Tatum, Dejounte Murray and Isaiah Jackson. So ... what gives? Why are there seemingly more Achilles injuries these days than in previous years? Is it heavier workloads? Too many games? The style of play? Let's share some theories that are going around: It could be the style of the modern NBA that's one factor There's this thought from Yahoo's Tom Haberstroh, after Tatum went down with the devastating injury against the New York Knicks: Tatum's assignment on the 7-foot [Karl-Anthony] Towns is representative of a growing expansion of the game's geometry. The wing player was tasked with banging down low and wrestling with Towns for rebounds, while also staying with him when he ventured out to the perimeter where Towns is comfortable launching from 30 feet. Guards are centers and centers are guards. Towns leads a growing trend of stretch 5s who demand defenders to follow big men for a much larger surface area on the floor. Whether it's Nikola Jokić in Denver, Chet Holmgren in OKC or Myles Turner in Indiana, having a stretch 5 is the norm for title contenders now. Hell, Draymond Green is averaging more 3-point attempts in this series (5.8) than Reggie Miller did in his postseason career (5.7). It's just a game of more movement now on both ends. That's an added load on the Achilles, possibly. Is it because there are too many games? This has been a discussion for some time now. There's 82 regular-season games, and if you're an NBA title contender, you're potentially going to play another 20-something contests on top of that. And what if it's an Olympics year? It just might be too much. Has it gotta be the shoes? This is a theory floated by ex-NBA point guard Nick Van Exel back in May: But this might be backed by science, per Basketball Network: That school of thinking is backed up by a 2010 clinical study, which concluded that the type of footwear can affect Achilles tendon loading during dorsiflexion. According to the research, high-top shoes reduce the tension on the Achilles tendon by 9.9 percent. With tied laces, high-top shoes also cut the peak dorsiflexion angle by 7.2% as compared to low-top sneakers. But in recent years and after the late Kobe Bryant started the revolution, players have preferred wearing low-top sneakers over high-tops because with more ankle freedom, it allows more agility which helps players make quick change in direction and fast lateral movement. But low-tops and mid-tops don't protect the ankle as much the the high-tops. Is it due to playing through other injures? Haliburton's injury came after a calf strain. Kevin Durant tore his Achilles after a calf injury back in 2019.