A Chinese ecommerce divorce saga turns ugly
A Chinese ecommerce divorce saga turns ugly
In February, Lว Guรณqรฌng ๆๅฝๅบ, the former CEO and co-founder of Dangdang.com, one of Chinaโs most popular ecommerce sites, announced his departure from the company. Li claimed, via a statement, that he had voluntarily given up his throne to his wife, Yรบ Yรบ ไฟๆธ, who co-founded the platform with him in 1999 and allegedly plotted his ousting by diminishing his influence inside the enterprise.
โI believe that after I leave Dangdang and end the husband-and-wife business structure, Yu Yu will lead the company to future success and continue providing high-quality service to our 300 million customers,โ Li wroteย (in Chinese), indicating a peaceful handover of power, and possibly alluding to an amicable split with his wife.
However, it turns out that Liโs breakup with Dangdang was only the beginning of a contentious, drawn-out divorce drama, one that reached new heights this week.
The latest controversy comes in the form of an argument on WeChat, Chinaโs all-encompassing messaging app. On October 23, Yu left a lengthy comment on Liโs WeChat Moments (similar to a news feed) in which she listed a series of accusations.
She accused her 55-year-old husband of stealing a staggering 130 million yuan ($18 million) from their joint bank account, which included some of her parentsโ savings. She claimed to have endured years of domestic violence. She said Li has been lying about his sexual orientation and has had sexual relationships with several gay men during their marriage. โLi Guoqing, I will scrape and break your face,โ Yu said.
Li swiftly hit back with denials and threats. He wrote on Weibo that he filed a divorce petition in July, but Yu didnโt agree to call it off. Li also denied Yuโs allegations of him transferring properties, vowing that he would fight relentlessly for his stake in Dangdang. Regarding questions about his sexuality, Li suggested that he would take legal action to shut down his wifeโs defamation and slander about his private life. On top of all that, Li noted that he had โsolid evidenceโ about some secrets that Yu had been hiding during their marriage. โI donโt want to expose your hypocrisy because I think thereโs still love between us, but donโt take my compromises as weakness,โ Li wrote.
On October 24, Li made another post on Weibo, revealing that the billionaire coupleโs disagreement on how to split their stock shares of Dangdang was the main cause of their hostility toward each other. โDangdang was created and managed by me,โ Li said, adding that he would walk out of his marriage only if Yu agreed to split the company equally between them. In a follow-up statement published on Friday, Li clarified that he never cheated on his wife with other men. And while he admitted that he had an STD, Yu said that he was infected not during sexual contact, but from a public bathhouse.
The exchange, full of salacious and attention-grabbing claims, made a bunch of headlines and intensified the publicโs curiosity. But those who have been following the company have known for a while that a grudge between the two founders has been brewing. Earlier this month, when speaking about his departure from Dangdang during an on-camera interview, Li lost his temper and threw a glass of water on the floor. โI will never forgive her because sheโs my wife,โ Li told the interviewer.
Dangdang was founded in 1999 as an online bookseller, but it did not take long for the platform to expand into a massive ecommerce company in the same vein as Amazon. In 2005, Dangdang reached 440 million yuan ($62.2 million) in annual sales, only second to Alibabaโs Taobao in terms of performance that year. In 2010, the company made an IPO on the New York Stock Exchange estimated at approximately $1 billion. In recent years, Dangdang has been gradually losing its prominence among Chinese customers, but the entire fortune of the Li Guoqing-Yu Yu couple still adds up to a whopping 7 billion yuan ($990.7 million), by some estimates.
In the current drama, most people seem to be opting to side with Yu, given Liโs history of making offensive comments about Yu and sexist remarks in general. In the interview mentioned above, Li complained that Yu never cooked or washed socks for him. In November last year, when education mogul Yรบ Mวnhรณng ไฟๆๆดช, the founder of Chinese tutoring giant New Oriental Group, publicly blamed Chinese women for the countryโs declining moral standards, Li somehow felt the urge to voice his support for Yu on Weibo, writing that he admired Yuโs courage to โstate the truth.โ One month later, when JD.com CEO Richard Liu (ๅๅผบไธ Liรบ Qiรกngdลng) was embroiled in a rape scandal, Li came to Liuโs defense, arguing that Liuโs behavior caused no harm to his wife or the company because โit was just a consensual sexual relationship outside his marriage.โ
Liโs sexism has been so obvious and troubling that it even provoked a commentaryย (in Chinese)ย from China Womenโs News, the publication of the All-China Women’s Federation. โLiโs remarks have exposed his twisted, regressive views on gender,โ the newspaper wrote. โHis defense of extramarital sex further shows his problems with morality and his ignorance of marital laws. This is utterly baffling.โ