Senior IOC member Dick Pound told @Reuters that the growing concern about Chinese tennis star #PengShuai’s safety could push the @iocmedia into taking a hardline against #Beijing, who is scheduled to host the 2022 Winter Olympics in weeks. news.yahoo.com/olympics-peng-…
Such is the global outcry over Peng's safety and whereabouts, Pound said the situation could force the IOC to confront China over its human rights record.
Although the outrage is unlikely to stop the Beijing Winter Games going ahead in February, Pound would not completely rule it out.
"If that's not resolved in a sensible way very soon it may spin out of control," Pound, the IOC's longest serving member, told Reuters. "It may (force IOC into taking a harder line).

"Whether that escalates to a cessation of the Olympic Games I doubt it. But you never know."
Even though Peng is a three-time Olympian, the IOC has given no indication it is willing to take a similar stand and risk billions of dollars in television rights and sponsorships.
"I don't know whether we are there yet but I'm sure they (IOC executive committee) are following this to see where it is going," said Pound, a Canadian lawyer and former-Olympian.
"Action against one of its own citizens for airing a complaint about one of their higher ups - that's harder for them (China) to handle than the usual 'this is a domestic matter now get lost'."
Thus far the IOC has declined to comment on Peng's matter, saying it believed "quiet diplomacy" offered the best opportunity for a solution.
Pound conceded that China does not respond well to threats and negotiating with sport and government officials requires nuance.
"That would be a little harder line than the IOC would normally be taking," said Pound, when asked if the IOC might demand a meeting with Peng.
"Where we have generated some change of attitude in the past we've said, "listen this is all out there in the public how do we respond. We can't ignore it.
"That in the past has produced some movement.
"My guess is it will be that kind of line rather than jabbing them in the chest and saying 'do this or the world will end'.

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More from @WilliamYang120

22 Nov
A YouTube video of Xinjiang detention facilities has rekindled concern over #China's crackdown on ethnic minorities. Researchers say the videos offer new evidence, but many fear for the vlogger's safety. My latest: dw.com/en/xinjiang-fo…
A 20-minute video featuring more than a dozen detention facilities in China's Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region has offered fresh evidence and renewed the discussion around China's large-scale crackdown on ethnic minorities in the region.
The video was filmed by a Chinese man named Guanguan, who went to Xinjiang after reading a series of articles from US news outlet BuzzFeed News, indicating the locations of several detention centers in the region.
Read 32 tweets
22 Nov
On @iocmedia's call with #PengShuai: @tengbiao said the IOC has become "#Beijing's helper" as they try to "put on a show in coordination with the Chinese government, claiming that Peng is free and she just wants her privacy to be respected." My latest for @dw_chinese:
"The role of the IOC is not neutral, because they are completely on the side of the Chinese government," Teng told me.
"The IOC has been almost indifferent to human rights issues. I and other human rights defenders have repeatedly negotiated with IOC officials, and human rights organizations have proposed boycotting the Beijing Winter Olympics over the deterioration of human rights in China,...
Read 4 tweets
22 Nov
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and European Council President Charles Michel are planning to meet in Japan on Nov. 29 to discuss closer ties in the Indo-Pacific region. The stability of the #Taiwan Strait is one of the main topics for discussion. english.kyodonews.net/news/2021/11/f…
Kishida and Michel are expected to raise the importance of peace and stability in the #Taiwan Strait, democratic values and the rule of law as well as #China's attempts to unilaterally change the status quo in the East and South China seas during their talks, the source said.
The first visit by Michel to Japan since he took office in December 2019 comes after the EU released its new Indo-Pacific strategy in September that includes bolstering relations with Taiwan ...
Read 4 tweets
22 Nov
Lithuanian Foreign Minister @GLandsbergis has called on Japan, the United States and other democratic nations to step up coordination in their dealings with #China, citing "economic pressure" it is facing from Beijing ...english.kyodonews.net/news/2021/11/9…
... in apparent retaliation for deepening ties with Taiwan.
In a recent interview in Vilnius, Landsbergis said Beijing "is not basing arguments on international law, just on power," in reference to sanctions he said China slaps on many Lithuanian companies operating in the world's second-largest economy.
Read 6 tweets
21 Nov
From @selina_cheng: #HongKong public libraries over the past 12 years have removed 29 out of 149 books about the Tiananmen Massacre from their shelves, a total of 263 individual copies. hongkongfp.com/2021/11/21/hon…
"Of the 120 titles still stocked, just 26 are displayed on the shelves and immediately available for borrowing. The remaining 94 are only available on request, are stored in off-site book reserves, or are housed in reference sections where they can be read but not borrowed."
"In June 2009, the Home Affairs Bureau made public a spreadsheet of 149 titles about the 1989 June 4 massacre that were in Hong Kong’s public libraries at the time, with a total of 1,162 copies available for lending or reference."
Read 8 tweets
21 Nov
After facing widespread criticism for the position it took on #WhereIsPengShuai, the @iocmedia held a video call with Peng on Sunday and she obviously claimed that she is safe and well and “would like to have her privacy respected at this time.” olympics.com/athlete365/voi…
“That is why she prefers to spend her time with friends and family right now. Nevertheless, she will continue to be involved in tennis, the sport she loves so much,” IOC wrote.
“I was relieved to see that Peng Shuai was doing fine, which was our main concern. She appeared to be relaxed. I offered her our support and to stay in touch at any time of her convenience, which she obviously appreciated,” said @ELaaksonen3, IOC Athletes’ Commission.
Read 4 tweets

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