NBA stirs U.S. hornet's nest, faces
China backlash over Hong Kong tweet
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[October 08, 2019]
By Paul Simao and Josh Horwitz
WASHINGTON/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - An
increasing number of U.S. lawmakers voiced anger on Monday over the
NBA's response to a Houston Rockets official's tweet backing Hong
Kong democracy protests, raising U.S.-China tensions as talks to end
a 15-month trade war resumed.
The National Basketball Association, which has built a huge
following and burgeoning business in China, said in a statement it
regretted the remarks by Houston Rockets General Manager Daryl
Morey. A Chinese-language version seemed to go further, with the
league saying it was "extremely disappointed" in Morey's
"inappropriate" remarks.
That prompted a torrent of criticism in U.S. political circles, with
a number of U.S. senators excoriating the league for what they saw
as a willingness to allow China to censor free speech and trample
other American values for the sake of profit.
"The NBA wants money, and the Communist Party of China is asking
them to deny the most basic of human rights," Senator Ben Sasse of
Nebraska said in a statement. "In response, the NBA issued a
statement saying money is the most important thing."
Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, a self-described lifelong Rockets fan,
wrote in a tweet on Sunday that he had been proud to see Morey "call
out the Chinese Communist Party's repressive treatment of protesters
in Hong Kong."
"No one should implement a gag rule on Americans speaking out for
freedom," Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer wrote in a tweet.
Other legislators accused the NBA, no stranger to U.S. politics, of
a double standard when it comes to China.
NBA stars and some coaches have been outspoken in their criticism of
U.S. President Donald Trump, and NBA Commissioner Adam Silver has
urged players to speak out on issues of concern, including alleged
police brutality and gun violence.
Police in Hong Kong have used rubber bullets, tear gas and water
cannons against pro-democracy demonstrators in the former British
colony, which has been plunged into its worst political crisis in
decades.
The Rockets' Morey, who was named NBA executive of the year in 2018,
tweeted his support for the protests over the weekend. His initial
tweet, which he swiftly deleted, included an image captioned: "Fight
For Freedom. Stand With Hong Kong."
Morey apologized on Monday.
"I did not intend my tweet to cause any offense to Rockets fans and
friends of mine in China," he tweeted.
"I was merely voicing one thought, based on one interpretation, of
one complicated event," he said, adding that he had since heard and
considered other perspectives and noting that his tweets did not
represent the Rockets or the NBA.
'LONG TIME TO REPAIR'
Morey's support for the democracy protests, now in a fourth month,
angered Beijing, Chinese fans and the team's partners in a key
market. Some 300 million people play the game in China, NBA Deputy
Commissioner Mark Tatum told Reuters this month.
NBA China, which conducts the league's business in the country, was
launched in 2008. It is now worth more than $4 billion, according to
Forbes.
Some Chinese fans called for a boycott of the Rockets, who are
widely followed in China, partly because they drafted Chinese player
Yao Ming in 2002. Yao became a star and helped build the NBA's
following there.
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An NBA logo is seen on the facade of its flagship store at the
Wangfujing shopping street in Beijing, China October 8, 2019.
REUTERS/Tingshu Wang
"I watched the Rockets for 21 years, but I'm still a Chinese person
first and foremost," one social media user said.
The Chinese Basketball Association, chaired by Yao, said it was
suspending "exchanges and cooperation" with the team.
Sportswear brand Li-Ning and sponsor Shanghai Pudong Development
Bank (SPD Bank) Credit Card Center suspended work with the Rockets,
while the team's games were dropped by Chinese state broadcaster
CCTV's sports channel. Chinese technology company Tencent also said
it would temporarily stop streaming Rockets games.
CCTV said Morey's apology did not go far enough. Hu Xijin, the
editor of the state-controlled Global Times newspaper, tweeted on
Monday: "If the Rockets want to keep its Chinese market, the team
need to avoid offending Chinese public."
Joseph Tsai, owner of the NBA's Brooklyn Nets and co-founder of
Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd <BABA.N>, said
the damage from Morey's tweet "will take a long time to repair."
The NBA sought to contain the damage, saying in its statement that
it recognized that Morey's views had "deeply offended many of our
friends and fans in China, which is regrettable."
"We are extremely disappointed in the inappropriate remarks made by
Houston Rockets General Manager Daryl Morey," the league said in the
Chinese-language version of its statement.
The NBA added, "we have great respect for the history and culture of
China and hope that sports and the NBA can be used as a unifying
force to bridge cultural divides and bring people together".
TRADE TALKS
The controversy over Morey's initial tweet and the NBA's handling of
it arrived at a particularly delicate time in U.S.-China relations,
which have soured as a result of the tit-for-tat tariffs imposed by
the two sides on each other's imports.
U.S. and Chinese deputy trade negotiators launched a new round of
talks in Washington on Monday, with neither side showing signs of
giving ground. The two days of negotiations are to be followed by
the first minister-level trade talks in more than two months.
The NBA is also the latest example of a major brand caught in
controversy over the Hong Kong protests.
Many Western fashion brands, including Spain's Zara <ITX.MC>, have
been forced to clarify positions on Chinese sovereignty as the
protests fuel nationalist fervor.
Chinese internet users in August blacklisted bubble tea brands from
Taiwan after a Hong Kong franchise urged solidarity with protesters.
(Reporting by Josh Horwitz in Shanghai, Chris Gallagher in Tokyo;
Additional reporting by Lincoln Feast in Sydney and Kevin Krolicki
in Singapore; Writing by Darren Schuettler and Paul Simao; Editing
by Gerry Doyle, Alex Richardson and Jonathan Oatis)
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