Peng Shuai: China accuses other countries of ‘maliciously hyping up’ case of missing tennis star

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China has said that fears and concerns over Peng Shuai are being “maliciously hyped up” and “politicised,” amid global concerns over the wellbeing of the tennis star who recently accused a senior Chinese leader of sexual abuse.

“I think some people should stop deliberately and maliciously hyping up, let alone politicise this issue,” foreign ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said on Tuesday.

The remarks come in the backdrop of mounting international concerns over China’s accountability with respect to the tennis player’s welfare and safety.

China had denied that Peng had disappeared from the public sphere after she posted #MeToo accusations on 2 November against the country’s former vice premier Zhang Gaoli.

As international concerns over her safety grew, and after the country resorted to censoring the conversation around her allegations in the weeks after, a video and photos released online showed the tennis star smiling and talking to people at a restaurant.

Peng also held a video call with International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Thomas Bach.

The country had said that it was “not aware” of the controversy around the tennis player just days before the photos and video of the tennis star were posted and the video call was arranged.

The 67-second video and photos of Peng smiling and seemingly enjoying herself at a restaurant shared by China’s state-run media have failed to quell concerns, as the chief of the Women’s Tennis Association called it “insufficient” to meet their concerns.

The association said it was worried about Peng’s “wellbeing and ability to communicate without censorship or coercion.”

The issue of Peng’s welfare has also snowballed into a political controversy.

The government of Australia, whose ties with China have already been strained, said on Monday that the country must answer serious concerns over the tennis star.

An Australian government spokesperson said: “It is understandable that many people, including in the international sporting community, have raised serious concerns about Ms Peng’s welfare.”

This was a matter that needed to be responded to with transparency and accountability, the spokesperson added.

Another fallout of the controversy has been its linking to a growing chorus of voices urging a diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Winter Olympics, something the Australian government also raised, citing alleged human rights abuses being committed against Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang.

Several human rights activists and an independent senator have pushed Australia to join a diplomatic boycott of the Olympics event scheduled for February 2022.

Elaine Pearson, the Australian director of the nonprofit Human Rights Watch, said China was “actively committing crimes against humanity against Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang”.

She said that the Olympics should not be used as a tool to legitimise the Beijing administration which she said was committing crimes against humanity, in addition to other serious human rights abuses.

While the IOC president had said Peng was safe and well after his video call, several critics have remained sceptic over her welfare.

What was happening to her “would send a chill down the spine of anyone heading to Beijing for the Olympics,” Ms Pearson alleged.

She also hit out at the IOC, that she said has been “prepared to accept the Chinese government’s assurances at face value and tried to separate sport from politics”.

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