MeToo movement in China

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The MeToo movement (Chinese: #WoYeShi) emerged in China shortly after its origin in the United States. In mainland China, online MeToo posts were slowed down due to censorship by the Chinese government.[1][2] Because of this, Chinese women began using the #MeToo hashtag on their social media, along with a combination of bunny, bowl, and rice emojis, a reference to the term "Rice bunny," pronounced in Chinese as "Mi-Tu". The idea of using the “rice (mi) bunny (tu)” emoji came from one of the feminist activists .[citation needed]

At universities[]

Logo of Beihang University

The #MeToo movement began in China in 2017 when Luo Qianqian (罗茜茜) accused Beihang University Professor (陈小武) of having sexually harassed Luo in 2004 while she was a PhD candidate. While perusing Chinese question-and-answer site Zhihu, Luo saw other former students discussing Chen's improper behaviour, accusing him of sexual assault and saying he forced them to drink alcohol with him. One of the former students had recorded proof of the harassment. Luo then contacted the president of Beihang Alumni Association to accuse Chen publicly. Xiao Qiqi’s hashtag #MeToo on microblogging platform Weibo attracted more than 2.3 million views and the university removed Chen from his teaching position. China Daily praised the university's actions and encouraged students to continue exposing abusive teachers and professors.[2]

As the #MeToo movement gained more public attention, Li Tingting's partner Xiao Meili wrote an open letter denouncing the lack of proper investigation of sexual harassment on Chinese university campuses. Meili suggested universities offer education on sexual harassment to students, staff, and faculty through public lectures; that universities hire investigators; and establish hotlines for students to report sexual harassment directly to school officials.[3]

Peking University graduate Gu Huaying who wrote a joint letter to Peking University signed by 9,000 students asking the university to do more to prevent sexual harassment. The campaign faced pressure from the school authorities and social media censorship.

Professor Zhang Peng was removed from his teaching positions at Shanghai Normal University and Nanjing University when a #MeToo allegation accused him of raping one of his students while teaching at Peking University in 1998. The victim, 20-year-old sophomore Gao Yan, subsequently committed suicide.[4][5][6]

In the workplace[]

Foxconn company faced the #MeToo scandal revealed by one of the female employees from the assembly line

On the women’s labour rights website Jianjiaobuluo, an article was published by a female Foxconn assembly-line employee alleging they had experienced daily sexual harassment at the workplace, including dirty jokes about her body and unwanted physical contact. After the news of sexual harassment at Beihang University emerged, she demanded Foxconn on educating managers and employees about sexual harassment, and establish a hotline for reporting such sexual harassment, place anti-sexual harassment posters, and more. Her voice encouraged other female employees, especially those migrant workers and the undocumented rural workers.[7]

Chinese female journalist Huang Xueqin experienced attempted rape from her supervisor in the hotel room. She ended up quitting her job after this traumatic experience. According to Huang's survey, conducted among other Chinese female journalists, among a total of 250 polls, almost 80% of them reported sexual harassment that they decided to keep silent, and only 1% reported to police while 3.3% just resigned from their work positions. Shockingly, despite being a victim of sexual harassment, Huang was the person who got arrested just like other feminist activists by the police in Guangzhou for “picking quarrels and provoking troubles”, due to her #MeToo activism. Due to the lack of sensitivity of male police officers, it was reported that numerous female victims who went to police to report sexual harassment were discouraged and ignored from pressing charges, and had to wait for a long time in order to be cared for by a female police officer.[8]

In religion[]

Shi Xuecheng, who was accused of sexual harassment towards nuns and female disciples.

Reports emerged in 2018 of allegations of sexual misconduct by the abbot of Longquan Monastery, Shi Xuecheng. Two monks at Beijing Longhua Temple, Shi Xianxia and Shi Xianqi published a 95-page report online revealing the sexual harassment by their religious leader. According to their report, the abbot Shi Xuecheng sent sexually harassing text messages to a nun, Xianjia. Additionally, Shi Xuecheng sent sexually harassing texts to five other female disciples from Kek Lok Temple in Malaysia.[9] Two of them acted more defensively and rejected; however, four disciples ended up agreeing to the Shi Xuecheng's sexual demands after long hesitating. The report says that the female disciples were sexually harassed to become reliant on the abbot’s religious power. The Haidian district police received the alerts on this issue of sexual assault that happened at the temple in June 2018. Shi Xuecheng was also an official of the Chinese Communist Party, in charge of the government-run Buddhist Association. As a result of #MeToo, Shi Xuecheng lost his position as the abbot and is currently under investigation for sexual transgressions as a religious and political leader.[10]

In sports[]

On November 2, 2021, professional tennis player Peng Shuai shared allegations of sexual assault against Zhang Gaoli, former Vice Premier of the People's Republic of China and a high-ranked official of the Chinese Communist Party cadre.[11] Since then, she has not been heard from, which has raised concerns.[12]

Police intervention and government censorship[]

In 2015, a group of five Chinese feminists (Da Tu, Li Tingting, Wei Tingting, Wu Rongrong, and Wang Man) planned to distribute flyers on International Women’s Day to protest sexual harassment on public transportation. On March 7, the day before the planned protest, they were arrested and held in custody for the next 37 days for “picking quarrels and provoking trouble”. The group became known as The Feminist Five. Da Tu mentioned that her feminist organization was reported to the police and forced to close, and that feminist performance art and public protest had almost impossible. She had been fighting sexual harassment in China since 2012; however, the public space for such activism drastically reduced since 2014 due to Chinese government censorship and police intervention. While in prison, Li Tingting was mocked for her lesbianism.[13]

References[]

  1. ^ Hernandez, Javier C.; Mou, Zoe (January 23, 2018). "'Me Too,' Chinese Women Say. Not So Fast, Say the Censors". Archived from the original on February 1, 2018.
  2. ^ a b Leta, Hong Fincher (2018). Betraying Big Brother: the feminist awakening in China, 1-32.
  3. ^ Xiao Meili. "China Must Combat On-Campus Sexual Harassment: An Open Letter". SupChina, 8 January 2018. https://supchina.com/2018/01/08/china-must-combat-on-campus-sexual-harassment-an-open-letter.
  4. ^ Xiao Meili, "Who Are the Young Women behind the '#MeToo in China' Campaign? An Organizer Explains", China Change, 27 March 2018, https://chinachange.org/2018/03/27/who-are-the-young-women-behind-the-metoo-in-china-campaign-an-organizer-explains.
  5. ^ Mini Lau, "As #MeToo Movement Gains Traction in China, Professor is sacked 20 Years After Alleged Rape", South China Morning Post, 7 April 2018, www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/2140724/chinese-professor-sacked-friends-suicide-victim-demand-apology-20.
  6. ^ Javier C. Hernandez, "China's #MeToo: How a 20-Year-Old Rape Case Became a Rallying Cry", The New York Times, 9 April 2018, https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/09/world/asia/china-metoo-gao-yan.html
  7. ^ [I Am a Female Worker at Foxconn. I Am Asking for a System of Anti-Sexual Harassment] Jianjiaobuluo, 23 January 2018, www.jianjiaobuluo.com/content/11481
  8. ^ Lau, "Police Detain Chinese #MeToo activist Sophia Huang Xueqin".
  9. ^ Shi Xianxia and Shi Xianqi, [A Report on a significant Situation], 4 -10
  10. ^ "Chinese Monk Xuecheng Removed as Head of Beijing's Longquan Monastery Amid Sex Probe", Straits Times, 30 August 2018,https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/east-asia/chinese-monk-xuecheng-removed-as-head-of-beijings-longquan-monastery-amid-sex-probe
  11. ^ Myers, Steven Lee (3 November 2021). "A Chinese Tennis Star Accuses a Former Top Leader of Sexual Assault". The New York Times.
  12. ^ "Naomi Osaka voices concern over Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai". BBC News. November 17, 2021. Retrieved November 20, 2021.
  13. ^ Zheng Churan (Da Tu), "Direct Activism".

Bibliography[]

  1. Fincher, Leta Hong. Betraying Big Brother, The Feminist Awakening in China. London: Verso, 2018.
  2. Javier C. Hernandez, "China's #MeToo: How a 20-Year-Old Rape Case Became a Rallying Cry", The New York Times, 9 April 2018, https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/09/world/asia/china-metoo-gao-yan.html
  3. Mimi Lau, "As #MeToo Movement Gains Traction in China, Professor is sacked 20 Years After Alleged Rape", South China Morning Post, 7 April 2018, www.scmp.com/news/china/society/article/2140724/chinese-professor-sacked-friends-suicide-victim-demand-apology-20.
  4. Mimi Lau, "Police detain Chinese #MeToo activist Sophia Huang Xueqin on public order charge",South China Morning Post, 24 October 2019, https://www.scmp.com/news/china/politics/article/3034389/police-detain-chinese-metoo-activist-sophia-huang-xueqin-public
  5. Shi Xianxia and Shi Xianqi. [A Report on a Significant Situation].
  6. Straits Times. "Chinese Monk Xuecheng Removed as Head of Beijing's Longquan Monastery Amid Sex Probe". 30 August 2018. www.straitstimes.com/asia/east-asia/chinese-monk-xuecheng-removed-as-head-of-beijings-longquan-monastery-amid-sex-probe.
  7. Xiao Meili. "China Must Combat On-Campus Sexual Harassment: An Open Letter". SupChina, 8 January 2018. https://supchina.com/2018/01/08/china-must-combat-on-campus-sexual-harassment-an-open-letter.
  8. Xiao Meili. "Who Are the Young Women Behind the '#MeToo in China' Campaign? An Organizer Explains". China Change, 27 March 2018, https://chinachange.org/2018/03/27/who-are-the-young-women-behind-the-metoo-in-china-campaign-an-organizer-explains.
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