日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区




Former CEO at Sina.com to Fight Dismissal

The chaos shaking China's largest Internet portal Sina.com intensified on Monday as its former chief executive officer (CEO) Wang Zhidong labeled the announcement of his resignation as "illegitimate'' and threatened legal action.

However, an announcement by Sina.com board of directors from California, which was released after Wang's claim, said the board sticks to its earlier decision to remove Wang as the portal's CEO, president and a member of the board.

Wang, who was said to have resigned from his posts as president, CEO and board director on June 1, broke his silence yesterday, three weeks after leaving the company.

In a written statement, Wang said he doubted the legitimacy of the decision by board members to force him to leave.

He said he had hired lawyers to help him fight his dismissal.

"My first feeling after getting the news of the so-called resignation was that I was betrayed, not by any specific person but by some force,'' Wang said.

"The board of directors has the right to fire the CEO of a company, but there are some loopholes in the procedures and legitimacy of the decision made by Sina.com's board,'' he said.

"Any contract conflicting with related laws will not be effective,'' he said.

A lawyer from the Shanghai office of the US-based O'Melveny & Myers LLP accompanied Wang at a press conference yesterday.

Wang holds shares in the Beijing-based Sina Internet Information Service Co Ltd (SIISC), which is a solely Chinese-funded business and has an Internet content provider license.

Present Chinese law forbids foreign capital from the telecommunications sectors, so the NASDAQ-listed Sina.com actually has to rely on SIISC to operate in China.

Sina.com can only provide technical support to SIISC which is directly providing Internet services to Chinese customers.

Wang said he was still president of SIISC and had held 70 percent of the shares in the business.

"The change in the management of Sina.com will not have any impact on the independence of SIISC,'' he said.

Wang returned to his office in Sina.com's Beijing headquarters yesterday for "some preliminary communications'' with Sina.com's new board.

Yesterday's developments indicate the conflict between Sina.com and Wang have intensified.

"The disputes have been made public and it will deal a big blow to the stock prices of Sina.com on the NASDAQ,'' said one IT analyst.

"Even if both parties reach an agreement later, Sina.com will not easily recover from the negative effects of the incident,'' he added.

In media reports, Wang has been portrayed as a hero fighting against capitalists who do not understand the Chinese Internet industry. Some Internet users have threatened to stop using Sina.com because of its management instability.

Some reports also said Wang had received encouragement from industrial giants in Hong Kong and the Chinese mainland to buy back Sina.com and regain control of the company.

A Sina.com executive said the new management team had been too busy coping with the management changes to consider the future of the company.

(Chinadaily.com.cn 06/26/2001)



In This Series

30 Million People Hook up to the Internet

Rosy Future for IT Industry

Nation's Internet Fever Cools Down

Shanghai Hosting a Gala of Dot Comers

References

Archive

Web Link

主站蜘蛛池模板: 九台市| 娄烦县| 崇礼县| 永德县| 南投县| 克什克腾旗| 金湖县| 阿拉善右旗| 南丰县| 稷山县| 阳春市| 三原县| 托里县| 深州市| 扎赉特旗| 临桂县| 晋江市| 大姚县| 云南省| 麟游县| 鹤峰县| 开化县| 婺源县| 永和县| 津市市| 泗阳县| 略阳县| 菏泽市| 治多县| 博罗县| 磴口县| 石屏县| 壶关县| 平和县| 浪卡子县| 顺义区| 辉南县| 荥阳市| 宜昌市| 即墨市| 常熟市|