The Columbus Dispatch

China’s #Metoo victims face abuse

Speaking out publicly brings new harassment

- Huizhong Wu

TAIPEI, Taiwan – Human resources and upper management wouldn’t deal with her accusation of sexual assault, a former employee of Alibaba said. So she went into the busy cafeteria at the Chinese e-commerce giant’s headquarte­rs and screamed out her plight.

Now she’s facing online harassment, accusation­s of lying from the wives of the two men she accused and a defamation lawsuit from a Alibaba vice president who was forced to resign. And, she revealed recently, the company fired her.

Women in China often face such treatment if they choose to speak publicly about sexual assault. In multiple high-profile cases, particular­ly during China’s 2018 #Metoo movement, victims were sued by the men who allegedly harassed them. Some have been targeted with online harassment and censored from speaking about their cases.

In the most high-profile case, former Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai disappeare­d from public view after accusing former high-level official Zhang Gaoli of sexual assault. Her accusation was quickly scrubbed from the internet and discussion of it remains heavily censored. In such a climate, women’s rights activists fear that fewer victims will be willing to speak up.

“This is helping the wrongdoer, and makes the workplace environmen­t even worse, and it’s an attack on the next woman who wants to stand out,” said Zhou Xiaoxuan, a #Metoo activist.

The former Alibaba employee told the Dahe Daily, a provincial Chinese newspaper, that she would not encourage other women to come forward, given her own experience of being attacked online and called a liar.

But she said in written responses to questions from The Associated Press that she would continue her fight. She is being identified only by her last name, Zhou, because of harassment concerns.

“I believe, if there’s one case of someone

being fired because of upholding their own rights, then there may be more and more such cases, and future victims of sexual assault may have an even more difficult time seeking justice,” she said.

Zhou accused a fellow Alibaba employee, surnamed Wang, and a client surnamed Zhang of sexual assault during a work trip in July. She said she woke up in her hotel room to find Wang kissing and groping her. She also said Zhang molested her while they were all at dinner. The wives of both men, who were not there, have denied the accusation­s.

Police detained both men in August on suspicion of “forcible molestatio­n,” but released Wang after 15 days, the longest one can be held under administra­tive detention. Prosecutor­s dropped the investigat­ion into Wang, though Alibaba fired him. Zhang, the client, is in police custody and a criminal case is pending.

Initially, Zhou thought she would get justice. Alibaba’s CEO Daniel Zhang pledged in a public memo in August to create an anti-sexual harassment policy, and senior leaders vowed to improve management, she said. Two executives

Zhou accused of not responding to her allegation­s resigned. One has since sued her.

“So even though I was already covered in scars, I was still willing to trust the company, and cooperate with the company,” she told AP.

Yet, last month, she got a terminatio­n letter accusing her of hurting the company. The letter from Alibaba subsidiary Zhejiang Tmall Technology Co. Ltd. said she was dismissed for spreading false informatio­n about her assault and about the company’s handling of the issue.

Alibaba has not responded to requests for comment.

Other victims have faced similar obstacles.

A recent report by researcher­s from Yale Law School found only 83 civil cases in public Chinese court databases related to sexual harassment or molestatio­n between 2018 and 2020. Among them, 77 were brought by the alleged harasser against companies or the victims. In just six cases, victims sued their harassers.

A large share of the few women who brought forward accusation­s against harassers during China’s #Metoo movement have faced defamation suits and have lost. That includes journalist­s Zou Sicong and He Qian. A court ruled in January that they had defamed more prominent journalist Deng Fei, because they did not provide enough evidence the incident had occurred.

Deng sued them after they published an account on Wechat in 2018 saying Deng had lured He, then 21, to a hotel room in 2009 to discuss story ideas, pulled off her clothes and tried to kiss and grope her. He and Zou appealed the ruling, which was upheld a second time by courts. They plan another appeal in a higher court.

Victims face a higher burden of proof in the courts, even when they are being sued.

In 2019, a Beijing court ruled Wang Qi defamed Zhou Fei, an official at the World Wildlife Fund in China, by accusing him of forcibly kissing her while they worked together. The court ordered Wang to issue a formal apology.

Zhou Xiaoxuan, the activist known as the face of China’s #Metoo movement, sued state TV host Zhu Jun only after he sued her for defamation first. She accused him of groping her when she was a young intern at CCTV.

Zhou got public support for her case early on and was able to give interviews. Now, her Weibo account has been banned from posting for a year. She said she gets messages attacking her every day.

“If there’s one case of someone being fired because of upholding their own rights, then there may be more and more such cases, and future victims of sexual assault may have an even more difficult time seeking justice.” Zhou Former Alibaba employee

 ?? ANDY WONG/AP ?? A former employee of Alibaba is facing online harassment and a lawsuit after accusing two men of sexual assault.
ANDY WONG/AP A former employee of Alibaba is facing online harassment and a lawsuit after accusing two men of sexual assault.

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