Same-sex relationship to unnatural testosterone, why Dutee Chand is the only Indian to feature on ‘TIME 100 Next’ – Free Press Journal

Posted: Published on November 15th, 2019

This post was added by Alex Diaz-Granados

Indian athelete Dutee Chand has been featured in the TIME 100 Nexta new expansion of the TIME 100 list of the most influential people in the world of TIME magazine on Wednesday.

The list highlights 100 rising stars who are shaping the future of business, entertainment, sports, politics, health, science and activism, and more. Chand is grateful to all her supporters and has expressed gratitude to the TIME for acknowledging her fight.

Sean Gregory the senior writet at TIME magazine quoted Dutee for getting featured " On the track, Dutee Chand sprints. Off the track, she fights. The 100-m runner from India is preparing to make her second Olympic appearance, in 2020 in Tokyo."

In July, she became the first Indian sprinter to win the 100-m at the World University Games. But back in 2014, Chand was effectively banned from competition because of her high natural testosterone levels; she appealed the verdict and won a precedent-setting case. This year, Chand announced she was in a same-sex relationship, making her the first openly gay athlete in Indias history," added Gregory mentioning the foremost reason of Chand that caught her the global attention.

"I am delighted to receive this recognition from the TIME. I believe in gender equality. I will continue to fight for the rights of young girls and women in sports as well as in the larger society," Chand said in an official statement.

"PUMA was the first brand that came forward to sign me as their brand ambassador in India. I have received a lot of support and encouragement from the brand. I'm really happy to be a PUMA athlete and represent the brand globally," she added.

Of the list, TIME Editor-In-Chief and CEO Edward Felsenthal writes: "When we first published our TIME 100 list of the world's most influential people 15 years ago, it was dominated by individuals who rose through traditional power structures: heads of state, CEOs of public companies, actors from big-budget blockbusters, leaders of global foundations."

"What has been striking about more recent editions is the growing number of individuals who did not need an establishment to command international attention--people like Parkland students (in 2018) and Greta Thunberg (in 2019). TIME has always been a barometer of influence--and the nature of influence is changing," he added.

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Same-sex relationship to unnatural testosterone, why Dutee Chand is the only Indian to feature on 'TIME 100 Next' - Free Press Journal

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