OPEN LETTER TO THE MARKET AND OFFICIAL NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION

Blue Aspirations do Brasil (CNPJ 44.162.111/0001-70), in strict compliance with the principles of transparency and objective good faith, hereby announces to the public the definitive and irrevocable dissolution of all its operational and legal ties with the Chinese majority shareholder and its affiliate:

  • Hainan Bojing Technology Co., Ltd. (Credit Code: 91460106MAD7J9L17D).
  • Hangzhou Blue Aspirations China (Register: 91320281MA201YPD41).

This decision is based on documented evidence of practices that violate both Brazilian and Chinese jurisdictions, as detailed below:

  1. Financial Irregularities and Capital Default

An audit conducted on February 24, 2026, confirmed the total absence of material evidence regarding the payment of the subscribed share capital of BRL 3,182,080.00. The foreign shareholder operated in the Brazilian market as a “defaulting partner” (sócio remisso), utilizing financial triangulations to evade official exchange controls (in violation of Art. 190 of the Chinese Penal Code).

  1. Cybercrimes and Fraud Against Creditors

We formally warn that communications sent by Mr. Lifen Song and his associates are part of a scheme involving Criminal Fraud/Larceny (Art. 171, Brazilian Penal Code). Evidence exists of the unlawful extraction of corporate data via the WeCom platform (Art. 154-A, Penal Code) and the forgery of documents intended to deceive good-faith partners (Arts. 298 and 299, Penal Code).

  1. Violation of Humanitarian Rights

We repudiate the state of “human suffocation” imposed by the parent company, characterized by the arbitrary withholding of salaries and subsistence funds from Brazilian professionals for over five months. This practice is classified as malicious withholding of wages, violating fundamental human dignity and international labor standards.

  1. Alert of Complicity and Federal Investigation

Please be advised that agents Lifen Song, Jianyu Qiu (Klaus), and Barnabas Chen are already the subjects of formal investigations by the Federal Police and the Labor Public Prosecutor’s Office (MPT). Any cooperation with or validation of documents issued by these individuals may constitute COMPLICITY under Article 29 of the Brazilian Penal Code.

Legal Basis for the Duty of Disclosure

This declaration is issued in strict compliance with the legal duties governing corporate activities in Brazil, serving as a protective measure for third-party assets and market integrity:

  • Article 422 of the Civil Code: The Principle of Objective Good Faith, which imposes a duty of transparency and cooperation upon all parties.
  • Article 1,011 of the Civil Code: The Duty of Care and Probity, requiring administrators to act with diligence in protecting the assets and reputation of the corporation.
  • Article 157 of Law 6.404/76 (Applied by analogy): The Duty of Disclosure, requiring the reporting to the market of any material act or fact that may influence the decisions of investors and commercial partners.