Advertisement

How Peng Shuai is fanning the embers of China’s #MeToo movement

  • Campaigners against sexual assault say the case is heartening despite the silencing of discussion inside the country
  • ‘Revealing the dark side of top party officials … means a lot,’ activist says

Reading Time:5 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
99+
illustration: Lau Ka-kuen

It was a click that was heard around the world.

Advertisement

Early last month, the send button was pressed on a post on Chinese tennis pro Peng Shuai’s Twitter-like Weibo account.

The post alleged sexual assault against a former senior Chinese politician, a claim that was equally sudden and explosive, coming out of nowhere and rippling around the country before censors stamped out mainstream discussion online.
Nevertheless the post continued to be relayed as screenshots, graphics, links and even on blockchain, encouraging members of China’s embattled #MeToo movement.

“This is the beauty of #MeToo. It cannot be pre-empted because no one can foresee who and when will be the next victim brave enough to speak up,” activist Huahua said.

Advertisement

“This very nature of #MeToo continues to breathe life into the movement despite clampdowns.”

02:23

WTA suspends tournaments in China over Beijing’s ‘silencing’ of tennis pro Peng Shuai

WTA suspends tournaments in China over Beijing’s ‘silencing’ of tennis pro Peng Shuai
loading
Advertisement