Tennis

Top tennis official still 'concerned' about Peng Shuai's whereabouts, ability to speak freely

The head of the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) remains "deeply concerned" about the whereabouts of Chinese tennis player Peng Shuai and her ability to "communicate freely, openly and directly" after she alleged she was sexually assaulted by a former leading Communist Party official.

Organization that runs women's pro tour threatens to pull events from China

Chinese tennis player Peng Shuai is pictured here at a tournament in 2016. The head of the WTA said he 'remains concerned about her ability to communicate freely, openly, and directly.' (Andy Wong/File/The Associated Press)

The head of the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) remains "deeply concerned" about the whereabouts of Chinese tennis player Peng Shuai and her ability to "communicate freely, openly and directly" after she alleged she was sexually assaulted by a former leading Communist Party official.

Peng, a three-time Olympian and former top-ranked doubles player, has dropped out of public view after her accusations against former vice-premier Zhang Gaoli in a social media post on Nov. 2, which was quickly taken down by Chinese authorities.

"[WTA chair and CEO] Steve Simon has reached out to Peng Shuai via various communication channels," the association said in a statement on Saturday. "[Simon] has sent her two emails, to which it was clear her responses were influenced by others.

"He remains deeply concerned that Peng is not free from censorship or coercion and decided not to re-engage via email until he was satisfied her responses were her own, and not those of her censors. The WTA remains concerned about her ability to communicate freely, openly, and directly."

A week ago, International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach said he had talked with Peng on a video call. The IOC did not release any transcript and said only that Bach reported she said she was well.

The IOC did release a photo of Bach talking with Peng through a video screen shot.

The IOC said in a statement that Peng appeared to be "doing fine" and said she had requested privacy. The IOC did not explain how the call was arranged, although it has worked closely with the Chinese Olympic Committee and government officials to organize the upcoming Winter Olympics in Beijing.

Rights group critical of IOC

Critics have suggested that Peng would not have called the IOC if she was truly free to speak.

Human Rights Watch has criticized the IOC for working with China's propaganda department in arranging the talk with Peng. The IOC has previously failed to intervene in other human rights issues clouding the upcoming Winter Olympics, claiming it must be neutral.

"The IOC has vaulted itself from silence about Beijing's abysmal human rights record to active collaboration with Chinese authorities in undermining freedom of speech and disregarding alleged sexual assault," said Yaqui Wang, a researcher for Human Rights Watch.

Simon has threatened to pull WTA events out of China unless he gets clear answers and assurances that Peng is speaking freely. It is the first sports body to publicly push back against China, which supplies critical income to other sports bodies like the IOC and the NBA.

The whereabouts of 75-year-old Zhang, the man accused by Peng, has not been reported. He has not spoken publicly about the incident. He stepped down from the powerful seven-member Politburo Standing Committee about three years ago.