The Xiaomi SU7 high-speed collision explosion incident continues to ferment. On April 2, a “Letter to All Users and the Public Concerned About the Xiaomi SU7 Accident” by Lei Jun went viral. The letter mentioned that the aftermath of the accident included promises to seek the truth, reflect and act, communicate transparently, and use ten years of perseverance to fulfill safety promises. Among them, it was mentioned that if there is a problem with the investigation vehicle, sales of related vehicles will be stopped immediately and the vehicles already sold will be recalled; Lei Jun will personally donate 100 million yuan to establish a “New Energy Vehicle Life Protection Fund” and launch joint research on “extreme collision power failure technology” with the Ningde Era. But soon, some industry insiders claimed that this screenshot was fake. The publisher was a veteran car critic. He deleted the image and said “that picture is fake, sorry.” The reporter contacted Xiaomi, which responded by calling this fake news. Currently, Xiaomi's official Weibo and Lei Jun's personal Weibo have not posted the above information. On the evening of April 1, Lei Jun voiced his voice to “stand up” to resolve the issue.

Zhitongcaijing · 04/02 10:25
The Xiaomi SU7 high-speed collision explosion incident continues to ferment. On April 2, a “Letter to All Users and the Public Concerned About the Xiaomi SU7 Accident” by Lei Jun went viral. The letter mentioned that the aftermath of the accident included promises to seek the truth, reflect and act, communicate transparently, and use ten years of perseverance to fulfill safety promises. Among them, it was mentioned that if there is a problem with the investigation vehicle, sales of related vehicles will be stopped immediately and the vehicles already sold will be recalled; Lei Jun will personally donate 100 million yuan to establish a “New Energy Vehicle Life Protection Fund” and launch joint research on “extreme collision power failure technology” with the Ningde Era. But soon, some industry insiders claimed that this screenshot was fake. The publisher was a veteran car critic. He deleted the image and said “that picture is fake, sorry.” The reporter contacted Xiaomi, which responded by calling this fake news. Currently, Xiaomi's official Weibo and Lei Jun's personal Weibo have not posted the above information. On the evening of April 1, Lei Jun voiced his voice to “stand up” to resolve the issue.
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