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Chinese Pop Star Dumped by Brands Over Accusation of Sexual Assault

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Chinese Pop Star Dumped by Brands Over Accusation of Sexual Assault

A teenager accused Kris Wu of getting her drunk in order to have sex with her. The reaction shows just how far China’s #MeToo movement has come.

Chinese Pop Star Dumped by Brands Over Accusation of Sexual Assault

Singer Kris Wu, center, performs in the 2017 Tmall 11.11 Global Shopping Festival gala, in Shanghai, China on Nov. 10, 2017.

Credit: Chinatopix via AP

A popular Chinese-Canadian singer, Kris Wu, has lost endorsement and other deals with at least 10 brands including Porsche and Bulgari after a teenager accused him of having sex with her while she was drunk.

The former member of Korean boy band EXO denied the accusation, which prompted an outpouring of supportive comments for the woman online and criticism of Wu.

“There was no ‘groupie sex’! There was no ‘underage’!” Wu said on his social media account, which has 52 million followers. “If there were this kind of thing, please everyone relax, I would put myself in jail!”

The backlash after the accusation appeared on the internet portal NetEase reflects the growing willingness of Chinese women to speak up about abuses in a male-dominated society.

Brands cut ties with Wu the next day. They are acutely sensitive to public opinion after the ruling Communist Party stirred up anger at shoe and clothing brands in retaliation for Western reports of human rights abuses in the mostly Muslim region of Xinjiang in the northwest.

In addition to Porsche and Bulgari, brands including Tuborg Beer and China’s Tencent Video and Master Kong Ice Tea scrapped endorsement, appearance, and other deals with Wu. Lancome said its contract with Wu ended last month.

Louis Vuitton said it suspended a contract with Wu. Some comments left on websites criticized the company for not dropping him outright.

The woman told NetEase that when she was 17, Wu encouraged her to drink too much at a party and she woke up in his bed.

“I hate it so much that my teeth itch,” she was quoted as saying. “I hate myself even more, hate it so much that I want to commit suicide.”

The woman said other women told her Wu seduced them, sometimes when they were under 18, with promises of jobs and other opportunities. There was no indication any were under China’s age of consent of 14 or that Wu faces accusations of criminal misconduct.

“Get out of China,” said a comment left under Wu’s social media post.

Wu, known in Chinese as Wu Yifan, grew up in Guangzhou in southern China and in Vancouver, British Columbia. He performed with EXO in 2012-14 and then launched a solo career.

As an actor, he appeared in 2017’s “XXX: Return of Xander Cage” and two Chinese box office successes, “Mr. Six” and “Journey to the West: The Demons Strike Back.”

Both Wu, 30, and the woman said they asked police to investigate.

Wu said he waited to respond publicly to avoid interfering with legal action.

Wu wrote he met the woman at a friend’s gathering on Dec. 5, 2020, but “I didn’t force her to drink,” and “there was not this sort of ‘details’ she describes.”

“I didn’t expect my silence to encourage these rumors, and I couldn’t stand it!” Wu wrote. “There were a lot of people there that day who can bear witness.”

In March, the ruling party targeted H&M, Nike, and other global brands over past expressions of concern about reports of forced labor in Xinjiang, where foreign governments say more than 1 million people have been confined in detention camps.

State TV called for a boycott of H&M, causing sales in China to plunge. Other official media criticized Adidas, Nike, Zara, Burberry and New Balance. More than 30 Chinese singers and actors pulled out of endorsement contracts with H&M, Nike and Adidas.

The ruling party claims credit for improving women’s status in China but has tried to suppress the “#MeToo” movement as a potential source of political unrest.