Chinese court rejects TV intern's #MeToo case appeal

It says evidence given by accuser not sufficient to prove entertainment show host sexually harassed her in 2014

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BEIJING • A court in Beijing has dismissed an appeal by a plaintiff in a high-profile sexual harassment case involving a well-known host of state broadcaster CCTV, a decision likely to deal a blow to China's #MeToo movement.
Ms Zhou Xiaoxuan, 29, accused one of CCTV's premier entertainment show hosts, Mr Zhu Jun, of groping and forcibly kissing her in 2014 when she was an intern working for him, allegations he denies.
Her accusations, posted on social media in 2018, quickly went viral and she sued Mr Zhu for damages that year.
In September last year, after two closed-door hearings, Haidian People's Court, a district court in the Chinese capital, rejected her claims due to insufficient evidence.
Ms Zhou vowed to appeal.
Following a further closed-door trial, the Beijing Municipal No. 1 Intermediate People's Court said late on Wednesday that it "rejected all of Ms Zhou's appeals and upheld the original judgment".
"The court held that the evidence submitted by the appellant Zhou was not sufficient to prove that Zhu had sexually harassed her, and that the appeal could not be substantiated," the court said on its official Weibo account.
Ms Zhou can apply to appeal again if new evidence is discovered.
Neither Ms Zhou nor Mr Zhu immediately responded to a Reuters request for comment.
However, Ms Zhou posted a video on her WeChat account on Tuesday, a day before the verdict was announced, in which she said she hoped people would not be discouraged.
"I have no regrets about standing up to all this, and I know that all painful feelings and hardships are precious, and I hope that you are like me, but still believe that everything has meaning."
REUTERS
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