Tennis - WTA Mandatory - Madrid Open - Madrid, Spain - May 6, 2018. China's Peng Shuai in action against Spain's Garbine Muguruza during their round of 64 match.
The president of the International Tennis Federation (ITF) told the BBC that it did not have plans to suspend events in China amid widespread concern for player Peng Shuai.
The former doubles world number one made a sexual assault accusation against former Chinese Vice-Premier Zhang Gaoli then disappeared from public view last month, prompting the Womenâs Tennis Association (WTA) to suspend its lucrative tournaments in China.
ITF President David Haggerty said the sportâs governing body, which oversees the Billie Jean King Cup and Davis Cup along with a number of lower-level tournaments, did not have plans to follow suit.
âWe donât want to punish a billion people, so we will continue to run our junior events in the country and our senior events that are there for the time being,â Haggerty told the BBC, adding that the group would âwork behind to scenesâ to help resolve the matter.
The WTAâs decision to pull its tournaments earned the support of current and former players including WTA founder Billie Jean King but enraged Beijing, with foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin saying China âopposes the politicization of sports.â
Source: Reuters / Reporting by Amy Tennery in New York; editing by Richard Pullin
Â
Qatar Secures Place Among the World's Top 10 Wealthiest Nations
Hamad International Airport Witnesses Record Increase in Passenger Traffic
Saudi Arabia: Any visa holder can now perform Umrah
What are Qatar's Labour Laws on Annual Leave?
Leave a comment