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Peng Shuai case: WTA threatens to withdraw all competitions from China

2021-11-19T07:39:45.111Z


The boss of the women's circuit will not be "reassured" as long as he has not spoken "in person" to the former player


The boss of the WTA, who manages the women's professional tennis circuit, does not rule out withdrawing competitions from China if Beijing does not shed light on the disappearance of champion Peng Shuai.

The tennis world has not heard from the player since she accused a former senior Communist regime official in early November of forcing her to have sex.

In an interview with CNN on Thursday, WTA boss Steve Simon threatened to withdraw women's tennis competitions from China if the country does not clear up the matter.

"We are completely ready to withdraw (from China) our activities and face all the complications that arise from it," said the boss of women's tennis.

"Because it's (rape accusations) more important than business," Simon told US TV station.

Peng Shuai, 35, on social media accused former Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli - who was from 2013 to 2018 one of China's seven most powerful politicians - of having her forced into a sexual relationship three years ago, before making her his mistress.

#WhereIsPengShuai pic.twitter.com/t8SPCrqnMl

- wta (@WTA) November 18, 2021

This accusation was briefly posted on November 2 on the official Weibo account, Chinese equivalent of Twitter, of the player.

China quickly blocked any reference to this message.

AFP was unable to confirm whether it was written by Peng Shuai in person.

Since then, the player has not directly communicated or made a public appearance and Zhang Gaoli has never reacted publicly to these accusations.

On Wednesday, the Chinese English-language public channel CGTN unveiled a screenshot of an email attributed to Peng Shuai, which the Chinese player allegedly sent to the WTA management.

Read also Peng Shuai case: Serena Williams "devastated and shocked" by the disappearance of the Chinese player

On CNN, Mr. Simon reiterated his doubts about the authenticity of this message in which the champion declares "false" his accusations against Zhang Gaoli.

“I don't believe that's the truth at all,” Simon told CNN, calling the email “staged”.

"If she was forced to write it, if someone wrote it for her, we don't know [...] but until we talk to her in person, we won't be reassured", the WTA official said.

When questioned several times, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespersons said they were completely ignorant of this affair, which they refused to comment on, arguing that it was not a diplomatic issue.

Source: leparis

All sports articles on 2021-11-19

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