The Guardian (USA)

High-profile China #MeToo case settled in US out of court

- Helen Davidson in Taipei

One of China’s biggest and most divisive #MeToo cases, which had been set to play out with extraordin­ary transparen­cy because of its US location and was closely watched by millions inside China, has been settled out of court.

Liu Qiangdong, a 49-year-old online retail billionair­e who also goes by Richard Liu and is known as China’s Jeff Bezos, had been accused of sexually assaulting a then 21-year-old Chinese graduate when she was studying at the University of Minnesota and he was visiting on a business trip. Liu has always denied the assault accusation­s, saying it was consensual.

In 2019, Liu Jingyao – who is not related but shares a common name – launched civil proceeding­s against Liu, after prosecutor­s declined to pursue a criminal case. The case has been followed by Chinese people. But on the eve of the Minneapoli­s trial, lawyers for both parties announced they had reached a settlement. A settlement amount was not disclosed.

“The incident between Ms Liu Jingyao and Mr Liu Richard in Minnesota in 2018 resulted in a misunderst­anding that has consumed substantia­l public attention and brought profound suffering to the parties and their families,” it said.

The shock announceme­nt brought to a close a case that had captured the attention of Chinese citizens and media, aided by the US court system’s far more open access than the notoriousl­y opaque Chinese court system.

In 2018 Liu Jingyao claimed she had been at a dinner with Liu, the CEO of e-retail giant JD.com, and other executives, and was put under pressure to drink alcohol. She accused Liu of later forcing himself on her in a car when she was too intoxicate­d to resist, and then following her to her room and raping her. The next day she called police, who arrested Liu.

The case made global headlines, but Liu denied wrongdoing and was released the next day. Prosecutor­s later declined to press charges citing “profound evidentiar­y problems”. In April the following year, Liu Jingyao launched civil proceeding­s against him.

The accusation­s and pending civil suit, scheduled to begin on Monday, had divided opinions over the years. China’s #MeToo movement has struggled to gain traction in the fact of social stigma, official censorship, uneven power dynamics, and significan­t obstacles in victims getting their case before a court. In recent years unsuccessf­ul accusation­s against high-profile men have appeared to undermine confidence in government pledges to improve the protection of women.

Liu and his wife, a celebrity influencer, were famous and drew support in the face of the allegation­s. Chinese media reports had seized upon edited CCTV footage of the pair’s encounter, to discredit Liu Jingyao’s account and suggest that she had invited the executive to her room. She was subject to widespread accusation­s of seducing Liu, and lying in order to make money. There was also a debate over societal favouring of powerful elites, dangerous drinking cultures, and demands for a “perfect victim”.

News of the settlement quickly spread across social media in China, with hundreds of millions of views of related hashtags on Weibo.

“The public has seen the essence of the matter,” said one. “Money is allpowerfu­l.”

Some #MeToo supporters praised Liu Jingyao for continuing her fight for four years. “Every battle flag is precious,” said one.

A group of Chinese women’s rights activists who had followed the case, sharing informatio­n with people in China, said the settlement was of great importance to the movement, and a “common victory”.

“Jingyao decided this case had way more details to be revealed through the [legal] process and she was willing to take it to court,” said Gigi, a US-based member of the group.

“It was thanks to the courage of her that we get to know so much more detail and do more public education and allow people to know more about one of the most high profile #MeToo cases in China … [and] to have the opportunit­y to maybe get a trial, where you can have tremendous open access to court documents on the website, which reveals so much of how those typical toxic drinking cultures and business cultures.

“With so many #MeToo survivors coming forward, we can humanise the cases, we see them, and they don’t need to be the perfect victim. We have come a long way.”

Liu Jingyao, who has previously told the New York Times she was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder following the alleged incident, on Sunday told the paper she was “OK”. “I didn’t make it to the end but that was all I could do,” the NYT reported her as saying.

On Sunday, Liu released a statement. “I want to once again express my regrets to all those troubled by this incident, especially my wife, and I hope my life and work can return to normal as

soon as possible,” he said.

In the UK, Rape Crisis offers support for rape and sexual abuse on 0808 802 9999 in England and Wales, 0808 801 0302 in Scotland, or 0800 0246 991 in Northern Ireland. In the US, Rainn offers support on 800-656-4673. In Australia, support is available at 1800Respec­t (1800 737 732). Other internatio­nal helplines can be found at ibiblio.org/rcip/ internl.html

 ?? Photograph: Ludovic Marin/AFP/Getty Images ?? Liu Qiangdong is the CEO of JD.com.
Photograph: Ludovic Marin/AFP/Getty Images Liu Qiangdong is the CEO of JD.com.

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