USA TODAY International Edition

WTA shows what leadership is in standing up to China

- Christine Brennan Columnist

When the history of this often rudderless, unmoored, disappoint­ing and even despicable time in worldwide leadership in all areas of internatio­nal life, politics and culture is written, there will be a joyous footnote, and it will tell the story of what the Women’s Tennis Associatio­n did in late 2021.

On Wednesday afternoon, the WTA announced that it was moving ahead with what it has been threatenin­g to do for nearly two weeks:

It immediatel­y suspended all of its tournament­s in China and Hong Kong after being rebuffed in its various attempts and demands to communicat­e with Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai, who said a month ago that she was sexually assaulted by a top Chinese official and then alarmingly disappeare­d from public view.

Now that’s how you handle a bully. Pop him in the nose.

While sports leagues and organizati­ons from the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee to the NBA have repeatedly cowered rather than confront China over its massive human rights abuses in a meaningful and powerful way, the WTA has put on a master class in responsibl­e and admirable leadership.

The WTA said it was willing to lose millions of dollars by doing the right thing – and then it went ahead and did just that.

“In good conscience, I don’t see how I can ask our athletes to compete ( in China and Hong Kong) when Peng Shuai is

not allowed to communicat­e freely and has seemingly been pressured to contradict her allegation of sexual assault,” WTA CEO Steve Simon said in a statement. “Given the current state of affairs, I am also greatly concerned about the risks that all of our players and staff could face if we were to hold events in China in 2022.”

This is what Peng, a two- time Grand Slam doubles champion and three- time Olympian, wrote on Chinese social media about being sexually assaulted in a post that disappeare­d within minutes on Nov. 2:

“Even if it is like an egg hitting a rock, or if I am like a moth drawn to the flame, inviting self- destructio­n, I will tell the truth about you,” she said.

“She knew the dangers she would face,” Simon said in his statement, “yet she went public anyway. I admire her strength and courage. … I have serious doubts that ( Peng) is free, safe and not subject to censorship, coercion and intimidati­on. The WTA has been clear on what is needed here, and we repeat our call for a full and transparen­t investigat­ion – without censorship – into Peng Shuai’s sexual assault accusation.”

Let’s compare and contrast this majestic call for justice and accountabi­lity with the pathetic manner in which another major player in Chinese sports, the IOC, has gone about its business.

Its calls for “quiet diplomacy” reek of appeasemen­t of their two- time Olympic business partners, first in 2008 for the Beijing Summer Games, now for the upcoming 2022 Beijing Winter Games, scheduled to begin Feb. 4.

Then, almost magically, a photo of a video conference call appeared with IOC President Thomas Bach and Peng on Nov. 21. The IOC said Peng thanked them for their concern and said she is “safe and well.”

The WTA was not represente­d on the call. There was no way to know who else was in the room with Peng. No video or audio was provided of Peng talking.

That was bad. This was worse: In its statement about the call, the IOC did not mention Peng’s sexual assault allegation.

I emailed IOC spokesman Mark Adams to ask why that was missing.

“You’ll appreciate that this was a personal conversati­on and that in the circumstan­ces it would not be correct to publicly discuss every aspect of what was said,” Adams wrote a week ago about what of course has become a worldwide # MeToo issue.

The WTA gets that. It gets every bit of it.

“None of this is acceptable nor can it become acceptable,” Simon said. “If powerful people can suppress the voices of women and sweep allegation­s of sexual assault under the rug, then the basis on which the WTA was founded – equality for women – would suffer an immense setback. I will not and cannot let that happen to the WTA and its players.”

And so he didn’t, providing the gold standard of behavior and leadership for our times.

 ?? ANDY WONG/ AP ?? Peng Shuai has rarely been seen in public recently after causing an internatio­nal uproar by accusing a Chinese politician of sexual assault.
ANDY WONG/ AP Peng Shuai has rarely been seen in public recently after causing an internatio­nal uproar by accusing a Chinese politician of sexual assault.
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