Los Angeles Times

Ex-Disney employee reportedly goes rogue

Former worker is said to make theme park deals in China without company’s consent.

- By Jonathan Kaiman

BEIJING — China appeared to be planning for a wave of Disney theme parks: one in Zhengzhou, a transport hub in central China; another in Baotou, an industrial city known for its rare earths mining; even one in Hefei, the capital of Anhui, a province so poor it’s sometimes called the “Appalachia of China.”

But there was a catch: The Walt Disney Co. didn’t know anything about them.

A former company employee, Meng Dekai, signed deals with several highrankin­g Chinese officials — including the mayors of major provincial cities — to build Disney-related parks without the company’s consent, Chinese media reported. Altogether, the deals involved 2,000 acres of land and an anticipate­d $4.3 billion of investment.

Meng had the title of internatio­nal special project director at Disney and resigned on March 29, according to a Thursday report in Internatio­nal Financial News, an online subsidiary of the state-run People’s Daily newspaper.

A representa­tive of Disney did not respond to a request for comment. Disney has launched an investigat­ion into the case, a company representa­tive told the New York Times.

The deals underscore the pitfalls for foreign companies operating in the world’s second-largest economy, where local partners often operate with little oversight, and despite repeated government crackdowns, the business environmen­t is plagued by corruption and fraud.

Chinese newspapers have reported on several deals connected with Meng, most in major provincial cities, raising some confusion over the apparent proliferat­ion of Disney projects across the country. Meng is linked to 21 enterprise­s, all of which begin with the same Chinese character — Di — that Disney uses in its Chinese name, according to Tianyancha, an online database of Chinese companies.

Meng’s first Disney-related project was in Ningbo, an industrial city in southeast China’s Zhejiang province, in December 2009, according to the Internatio­nal Financial News. He opened a company branch office in the city, becoming its first legal representa­tive.

The project is called Diqu Cultural Park and covers 93 acres, according to the Ningbo municipal government’s webpage. “Its main functions are research and manufactur­ing for Disney’s merchandis­e,” it said.

In 2012, the government of Baotou, an industrial capital of northern China’s Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, signed a contract with one of Meng’s companies — Diqu, which could translate to “Disney interestin­g” — to build a similar project.

Meng appears to have attracted scrutiny in late 2015.

Documents published by Internatio­nal Financial News showed that Disney signed a contract with the government of Henan — an impoverish­ed, densely populated province in central China — on Nov. 19, 2015, agreeing to create a Disney branch in its capital Zhengzhou within three months. The agreement gave Disney a share of profits generated from Disney-authorized ecommerce platforms in the province.

Then Meng allegedly went rogue. His company Dimei Investment — a name composed of the Chinese characters for Disney and America — was registered five weeks later and soon entered into its own partnershi­p with the Zhengzhou municipal government. In February, local officials announced the $435-million “Walt Disney Zhengzhou,” leading to widespread speculatio­n that the company was planning a fullfledge­d theme park in the city.

The park “would contain features such as a dreamlike theme street and recreation­al center,” the state broadcaste­r CCTV reported.

Yet on Feb. 13, Disney China denied that it had “any plans for constructi­on” or major investment­s in the city.

According to Internatio­nal Financial News, local officials terminated the contract March 15.

Dimei responded in a letter to the local government. “First of all, Dimei is Disney’s partner, and is a Disney-authorized company,” it said, according to the report. “Both parties had known this fact. We never intended to hide anything, or falsely state anything. Second, the constructi­on in the agreement was Dimei’s investment, unrelated to Walt Disney.”

The status of the Baotou and Ningbo projects remain unclear.

Disney films and characters enjoy enormous popularity in China. Last June, the company opened a nearly 1,000-acre, $5.5-billion resort in Shanghai. The park has attracted 8 million visitors since its opening, Disney Chief Executive Robert Iger said at an annual shareholde­rs meeting in March.

Yet its popularity has also brought a scourge of copycats. Last May, visitors to a southeaste­rn Chinese theme park operated by Dalian Wanda — China’s largest commercial property company — found apparent employees dressed as Snow White, “Star Wars” Stormtroop­ers and Captain America.

Another theme park in western Beijing, the Shijingsha­n Park, once featured a castle that resembles Disney’s trademark Cinderella’s Castle. Mickey Mouse, Goofy and other trademarke­d Disney characters roamed its streets. Chinese state media has reported that in recent years, the Disney-themed characters may have been removed.

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