Amazon to pull Kindle out of China
AMAZON.COM said that from Thursday (Jun 2) it will stop supplying retailers in China with its Kindle e-readers and will shut its Kindle e-bookstore in the country next year, the in latest pullback by a US tech firm from the restrictive Chinese market.
Amazon announced the decision on its official WeChat account on Thursday. It did not give a specific reason, but said it was adjusting the strategic focus of its operations and that its other business lines in China would continue.
The Kindle China e-bookstore will stop selling ebooks from June 30 next year, it said, though customers will be able to continue downloading any purchased books for a year beyond that.
It will also remove the Kindle app from Chinese app stores in 2024, it added.
"We remain committed to our customers in China. As a global business, we periodically evaluate our offerings and make adjustments, wherever we operate," a spokesperson for Amazon said in an emailed statement.
"With our portfolio of businesses in China, we will continue to innovate and invest where we can provide value to our customers." The spokesperson declined to provide further comment on the decision.
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Amazon's remaining businesses in China include cross-border e-commerce, advertising and cloud services. It shut down its China online store in 2019.
Reuters reported in December last year on Amazon's deep, decade-long effort to win favour in Beijing to protect and grow its business in China.
The report detailed how the Kindle business was one it had sought to expand in China, and cited an internal 2018 Amazon briefing document that said by the end of 2017, China had become Kindle's largest global market, "accounting for 40 per cent+ of our world device sales volume".
Amazon joins a long line of Western Internet companies, including Linkedin, Yahoo and Airbnb Inc to have cut services in or retreated completely from China in recent months, amid government efforts to tighten control over online content and new laws targeting data sharing and customer privacy. REUTERS
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