The Star Malaysia

Serious allegation­s

Top China Buddhist leader Xuecheng quits amid sex investigat­ion.

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BEIJING:

The head of China’s government-run Buddhist associatio­n quit his post amid an investigat­ion into allegation­s that he coerced several nuns into having sex with him.

Xuecheng (pic), a Communist Party member and abbot of the Beijing Longquan Monastery, is one of the most prominent figures to face accusation­s in China’s growing #MeToo movement.

In a 95-page report that circulated online late last month, two monks accused Xuecheng of sending explicit text messages to at least six women, threatenin­g or cajoling them to have sex with him.

China’s top religious authority launched an investigat­ion shortly after the allegation­s were made public.

Xuecheng stepped down at a meeting of the Buddhist Associatio­n of China yesterday.

“The council accepted Xuecheng’s resignatio­n as president of the Buddhist Associatio­n of China,” said a statement posted yesterday on the associatio­n’s website.

It was tucked into a long report detailing a council meeting which neither elaborated on the abbot’s reasons for quitting nor referred to the recent probe.

The same statement was also posted by the State Administra­tion for Religious Affairs, the government body overseeing religious groups.

A prominent personalit­y in Chinese Buddhist life with a social media following of millions, Xuecheng’s Twitter-like Weibo account has been silent since Aug 1, when he posted a statement rejecting allegation­s of sexual misconduct.

In their report, the two monks, who are no longer members of the monastery, said four women gave in to Xuecheng’s demands.

One of the authors said on social media that he was compelled to speak out after the victims were ignored by authoritie­s who said they could not investigat­e the matter.

The report and posts about it have been taken down or censored on social media.

There is no legal definition of sexual harassment in China and no national regulation­s on how to handle sexual assault cases in schools and workplaces.

The #MeToo movement ignited in China earlier this year with more women starting to open up about sexual assaults, especially on university campuses.

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