Chinese #MeToo plaintiff heads back to court for what could be last time
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September 14, 2021]
By Martin Quin Pollard
BEIJING (Reuters) - The plaintiff in a high-profile Chinese #MeToo case
headed into a second closed-door hearing in Beijing on Tuesday in what
she said could be her last time in court in her lawsuit against a
prominent state TV host.
Prior to entering the court, which was surrounded by dozens of uniformed
police and other unidentified plain-clothes security personnel, an
emotional Zhou Xiaoxuan clutched a bouquet of flowers as she thanked
supporters.
Zhou in a series of social media posts in 2018 accused television
personality Zhu Jun at state broadcaster CCTV of groping and forcibly
kissing her in 2014 when she was an intern working for him, allegations
he denies.
Zhou’s accusation quickly went viral and she sued Zhu for damages three
years ago, although the first hearing of the case was not held until
December 2020, also behind closed doors.
It was unclear if Zhu was present in the court on Tuesday. A lawyer for
Zhu could not immediately be reached.
Zhou told supporters and reporters near the court that this could be the
last time she would pursue this case, without elaborating.
One of a dozen or so supporters briefly held a placard reading "Let’s
stand together" before a police officer snatched it away. Unidentified
plain-clothes security personnel also recorded reporters' interviews
with some of the supporters.
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Zhou Xiaoxuan, also known by her online name Xianzi, arrives at a
court for a sexual harassment case involving a Chinese state TV
host, in Beijing, China September 14, 2021. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang
"There has not been a significant women's movement in
China as there has been in, for example, the United States or the
United Kingdom, so the society still I believe behaves and thinks in
a way which resembles the patriarchy," said a supporter outside the
court called Fei.
"Women are still prey."
China's #MeToo movement took off in 2018 when a college student in
Beijing publicly accused her professor of sexual harassment. It
spread to NGOs, media and other industries.
Discussion of #MeToo was then stifled, but recent extensive coverage
in China, without obvious censorship, of sexual assault scandals
involving tech giant Alibaba and celebrity Kris Wu has rekindled the
topic.
(Reporting by Martin Quin Pollard; Writing by Gabriel Crossley;
Editing by Tom Hogue)
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