Photos of missing Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai posted online

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Photos Of Missing Chinese Tennis Star Peng Shuai Posted Online
Peng Shuai, © AP/Press Association Images
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By Associated Press Reporter

An employee of Chinese state TV has posted photos of missing tennis star Peng Shuai online in a new effort to dispel concern about her disappearance after she accused a senior leader of sexual assault.

The photos appeared on Friday on Twitter, which cannot be seen by most internet users in China.

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The state TV employee, Shen Shiwei, wrote that they were on Peng’s account on the WeChat message service with the comment, “Happy Weekend.”

The ruling Communist Party is facing mounting appeals from tennis stars and the sport’s professional tour to prove Peng, a three-time Olympian and former number one ranked women’s doubles player, is safe and let her speak freely.


Peng Shuai
Peng Shuai (Michael Owens/AP)

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Meanwhile, the editor of a newspaper published by the party said Peng would “show up in public” soon.

The controversy is politically awkward as the Chinese capital Beijing prepares to hold the Winter Olympics in February.

A Foreign Ministry spokesperson on Friday denied knowing about the outcry over Peng’s disappearance.

Peng, 35, has not been seen in public since posting a statement on social media this month accusing Zhang Gaoli, a former member of the party’s Standing Committee, the ruling inner circle of power, of forcing her to have sex despite repeated refusals.

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Shen works for CGTN, the English-language arm of China Central Television that is aimed at foreign audiences.

His Twitter post came after CGTN this week distributed a statement it said came from Peng that retracted the accusations against Zhang.

The editor of Global Times, an English-language newspaper published by the Communist Party, said on Twitter he had confirmed from unidentified sources that the photos “are indeed Peng Shuai’s current state”.


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“In the past few days, she stayed in her own home freely and she didn’t want to be disturbed,” wrote the editor Hu Xijin.

“She will show up in public and participate in some activities soon.”

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The photos showed Peng with a grey cat and holding a panda figurine in what appeared to be a private home with stuffed animals lined up behind her.

There was no indication when the photos were taken.

The chairman and chief executive of the Women’s Tennis Association, Steve Simon, on Wednesday questioned the legitimacy of the statement released by CGTN.

Mr Simon said it “only raises my concerns as to her safety”.

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