US congressional resolution says IOC aided Beijing's 'disappearance' of Peng Shuai

A bipartisan pair of US lawmakers introduced a resolution on Friday accusing the International Olympic Committee of helping Chinese authorities whitewash tennis superstar Peng Shuai's sexual assault claims against a former senior Communist Party official in Beijing.

"Three-time Olympian Peng Shuai went missing after she said in a since-deleted post on Chinese social media site Weibo that she had been sexually assaulted and forced into a sexual relationship with Zhang Gaoli, who was the Chinese Communist Party's vice-premier from 2013 to 2018," says the resolution from Representative Jennifer Wexton, a Virginia Democrat, and Representative Michael Waltz, a Republican from Florida.

"The role of IOC leadership in collaborating with Chinese Communist Party officials to cover up Peng Shuai's allegations of sexual assault and disappearance call into question the organization's ability and willingness to hold abusers accountable and protect athletes participating in the 2022 Olympic and Paralympic Games in Beijing," it said.

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The resolution is the latest sign that Peng's #MeToo charges have ballooned into a full-fledged crisis for the IOC just two months before Beijing is set to host the Winter Olympics.

Calls had already been growing for the US and other nations to proceed with some form of boycott against the upcoming Olympics, mainly in protest of Beijing's policies targeting Uygurs and other ethnic minority groups in the far-west Xinjiang region. But the Peng case has only intensified those efforts.

US President Joe Biden said last month that he was "considering" a diplomatic boycott, meaning no US government officials would attend the games.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Friday that the US was not alone in weighing a response to Beijing's hosting of the Games.

"Many countries are looking at the Olympics, including the United States," he said. "We've been talking to lots of partners and allies about how they're thinking about it, and I'm sure that countries will be coming to decisions about how they're going to approach this in the near term."

The lawmakers' resolution also comes just two days after the Women's Tennis Association announced that it would pull all of its tournaments from China, effective immediately.