US Internet giant Google will close its business in China next month and may announce its plans in the coming days, Chinese media reported yesterday, after rows over censorship and hacking.
The China Business News quoted an official with an unidentified Chinese advertising agency as saying Google would go through with its threatened withdrawal on April 10, but that Google had yet to confirm the pull-out.
The agency is a business partner of Google, the report said.
The newspaper did not specify whether Google would close all or part of its operations in the country. It quoted an unidentified Google staff member as saying the company may announce on Monday the details of its exit from China and compensation for its local staff.
Google China spokeswoman Marsha Wang declined to comment on the report, saying only that there had been “no update” on the company’s situation.
The report was the latest in a series of clues to emerge recently indicating Google planned to leave China, which has the world’s largest population of online users, at 384 million.
Google confirmed earlier this week that it had received a letter purportedly from a group of 27 Chinese advertising agencies calling for the US company to open talks on compensation for possible business losses if it leaves China.
However, representatives of several of the firms subsequently said they knew nothing of the letter and Chinese media reports have raised doubts about its authenticity.
Wang said the company was still “reviewing” the letter.
Chinese media said on Wednesday that Google sent a notice to clients saying google.cn could close at the end of the month.
Google has cried foul over what it said were cyberattacks aimed at its source code and the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists.
The issue has sparked a simmering war of words between China and the administration of US President Barack Obama, which has called on Beijing to allow an unfettered Internet.
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