Chinese tennis player Peng Shuai has held private talks with the President of the International Olympic Committee, in Beijing
Shuai disappeared from public life after making sexual abuse accusations against a political official in November.
The 36-year-old met with Thomas Bark, and he was joined by the former Chair of the Athletes’ Commission and IOC member Kirsty Coventry.
Bark previously held a private phone conversation with Shuai in November.
The meeting took place on Saturday over dinner at the Olympic Club in Beijing.
Thomas Bach, president of IOC, says Peng Shuai, the Chinese tennis player and Olympian who accused a top Chinese party leader of sexual assault, will enter the Olympic closed loop for a meeting. He doesn’t specify when. pic.twitter.com/ivx1CJkYwQ
“During the dinner, the three spoke about their common experience as athletes at the Olympic Games, and Peng Shuai spoke of her disappointment at not being able to qualify for the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020. In this context, she also shared her intention to travel to Europe when the COVID-19 pandemic is over, and the IOC President invited her to Lausanne to visit the IOC and The Olympic Museum, to continue the conversation on their Olympic experiences. Peng Shuai accepted this invitation,” the statement read.
“Kirsty Coventry and Peng Shuai also agreed that they would remain in contact. And all three agreed that any further communication about the content of the meeting would be left to her discretion.”
Tennis star Peng Shuai says there has been a “huge misunderstanding”
Peng Shuai spoke to non-Chinese media for the first time since November last year.
That’s when she appeared to post and later delete allegations of sexual assault against a Chinese official on Weibo.
The sporting star has now come out to an old French newspaper, saying that the allegations were an “enormous misunderstanding.”
However, here’s the catch – the interview was done in highly controlled circumstances.
The paper had to submit questions in advance.
Her interview was conducted at the Winter Olympics and a representative from China’s Olympic Committee was beside her, translating her comments
Peng told the outlet she was living a normal life – and would like to know, “why such concern?” saying “I never said anyone sexually assaulted me”
The 36-year-old also hinted she could retire from professional tennis, commenting on her age, surgeries and the pandemic as factors.
This whole stunt has left more questions unanswered, with some critics saying the highly controlled comments are a propaganda exercise
The IOC continues to be slammed by some rights groups for failing to address China’s human rights record as the Winter Games take place In Beijing.
Trump claims Iran’s military largely neutralized; tensions rise with attacks threatening air travel and oil shipping.
President Trump says Iran’s military capability has been largely neutralised, including its navy and air force, as the conflict in the Middle East intensifies. Iranian attacks have threatened commercial air travel and oil shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, raising fears of wider economic fallout.
The U.S. Embassy in Riyadh has faced two attacks, while Gulf states worked to intercept further Iranian strikes. Officials report six U.S. troops killed and more than 700 deaths inside Iran as the exchange of fire escalates.
With global markets watching closely, the region remains on edge as military and diplomatic tensions show no signs of easing.
Subscribe to never miss an episode of Ticker – https://www.youtube.com/@weareticker
Trump says U.S. strikes could last four to five weeks and described the operation as the last best chance to act, while Secretary of State Marco Rubio warns the hardest hits are yet to come
Six U.S. service members have been killed, additional American forces are being deployed to the region, and the White House says nine Iranian naval ships have been destroyed
Iran says it sees no limit to its right to self defence and will not negotiate, as missile and drone attacks continue across Israel, Lebanon and Gulf states
More than 500 Iranians have been killed in U.S. and Israeli strikes, with further deaths reported in Lebanon, Israel and the UAE
Shipping, aviation and energy markets have been severely disrupted, more than 11,000 flights have been cancelled, Gulf stock markets have closed temporarily, and oil and gas prices have surged amid Strait of Hormuz fears