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BERLIN, July 28 (Xinhuanet) -- German-US carmaker giant DaimlerChrysler said
Thursday that its chief executive Juergen Schrempp will leave the company at the
end of 2005.
The Supervisory Board of DaimlerChrysler agreed to name Dieter Zetsche, now head
of the US-based Chrysler Group, to replace Schrempp as chairman of the Board
of Management of DaimlerChrysler from Jan. 1, 2006, the Stuttgart-based
carmaker said.
"The Supervisory Board and Schrempp are in full agreement that the end of
the year 2005 is the optimal time for a change in the leadership of the
company," said Hilmar Kopper, chairman of the Supervisory Board of
DaimlerChrysler.
"The decisions of the Supervisory Board have been made unanimously after a
thorough process," Kopper said.
Schrempp has been criticized by shareholders for the falling profits in
their Germany-based Mercedes Car Group and the bad performance of the Smart
compact car.
At the company's annual meeting in April, Schrempp admitted major problems
at its Mercedes division.
Mercedes-Benz's earnings slumped by 97 percent to 20 million euros (about
24 million US dollars) in the fourth quarter of 2004.
DaimlerChrysler shares have lost about a third of their
value over the past five years. Enditem |