Home>News Center>China
       
 

Watchdogs dismiss Moon plot appeal
By Jiang Zhuqing (China Daily)
Updated: 2005-12-07 06:11

The decision to suspend the business licence of a company which sold plots of land on the Moon has been upheld by the Beijing industrial and commercial watchdog at a public hearing discussion.

Reports said the company, known as "Lunar Embassy," sold sites of 298 yuan (US$37) an acre.

Li Jie, head of the firm, said he was fully confident of winning a lawsuit against the watchdog, rejecting all allegations during the hearing.

Officials from the Chaoyang District Administration of Industry and Commerce ruled land on the Moon belongs to the whole world and that no single individual or unit has the right to own, allocate or handle it.

"The selling of land on the Moon by the Lunar Embassy to its clients is a kind of fraud," officials said. "To own a piece of land on the Moon accords with no articles of national regulations and policies in China it is nothing but a beautiful dream."

But Li, chief executive officer of Beijing Lunar Village Aeronautics Science and Technology Co Ltd, said: "They don't have enough evidence to make the ruling."

He stressed his business activities did not violate any laws.

Because the Chinese Government claims no sovereignty of the moon, it does not have the right of jurisdiction or restrict the selling of property assets on it, said Li in his application to the public hearing.

"In fact, there is not a law or regulation in China that prohibits the selling of land on the Moon," he said.

The industrial and commercial watchdog agency in Chaoyang District suspended the company's business licence on October 28 on grounds of speculation and profiteering, reports said.



Wen starts Slovak visit
Old man refused to advertise for companies
Hebei coal mine blast kills 74
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

China, US start new round of strategic talks

 

   
 

Foreign firms' monopolies cause concern

 

   
 

Dam planned to contain river pollution

 

   
 

Deaths rise to 74 in Hebei coal mine blast

 

   
 

US air marshal kills passenger, citing threat

 

   
 

Saddam's stop-start trial goes on without him

 

   
  Medical bill scandal worsens as fresh allegations emerge
   
  Giant pandas to leave gilded cages
   
  62 dead, 13 missing in Hebei mine blast
   
  China links with Russia to combat toxic spill
   
  'Winter Days' too hot for drug rings
   
  Coastal city worries over seawater intrusion
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  It is time to prepare for Beijing - 2008  
Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.
Advertisement