China editor says he does not think Peng faces retribution
BEIJING: A well-connected Chinese state media editor on
Friday (Nov 19) weighed in on the scandal involving Chinese tennis star Peng
Shuai and her accusation of sexual assault by a former vice premier, saying he
does not believe she has been the target of retribution.
Former doubles world number one, Peng, 35, had not been seen
or heard from publicly since she said on social media on Nov 2 that the former
vice-premier, Zhang Gaoli, coerced her into sex and that they later had an
on-off consensual relationship.
Concern among the global tennis community and beyond has
grown over Peng's safety and whereabouts since her allegation, with the Women's
Tennis Association calling for an investigation and the world's top players
tweeting #WhereIsPengShuai.
Neither Zhang or the Chinese government have commented on
her allegation. Peng's social media post was quickly deleted and the topic has
been blocked from discussion on China's heavily censored internet.
"As a person who is familiar with Chinese system, I
don't believe Peng Shuai has received retaliation and repression speculated by
foreign media for the thing people talked about," Hu Xijin, the editor of
the Global Times, tweeted early on Friday.
The Global Times is published by the ruling Communist
Party's official People's Daily, and the influential Hu has an active presence
on Twitter, which is blocked in China. He did not make any similar comment on
his official Weibo account.
Known for often combative tweets targeted at the United States, Hu has a uniquely high profile in China’s tightly controlled state media.
The head of the Women's Tennis Association on Wednesday cast
doubt on an email, which was also released by a Chinese state media outlet on
Twitter, purporting to be from Peng and denying the allegations of sexual
assault and saying she is fine and resting at home.
"I have a hard time believing that Peng Shuai actually
wrote the email we received or believes what is being attributed to her,"
WTA Chairman and CEO Steve Simon said on Wednesday.
The issue has emerged as China prepares to host the Winter
Olympics in Beijing in February amid calls from global rights groups and others
for a boycott over its human rights record.
"This is not a foreign affairs matter, and I am not
aware of the situation you mentioned," foreign ministry spokesman Zhao
Lijian said on Thursday when asked about Peng's whereabouts and whether China
is concerned her case would affect its image ahead of the Olympics.
No comments