Thomas Axén nominated to Eniro's Board of Directors


Thomas Axén nominated to Eniro's Board of Directors 

The Nomination Committee has completed its work prior to the 2010 Annual General
Meeting and proposes Thomas Axén, CEO of Åhlensgruppen, to be elected as a new
member of the Board of Directors.

The Nomination Committee proposes that the number of members of the Board of
Directors remain unchanged at seven members. Suggested re-elected members of the
Board of Directors until the end of the 2011 Annual General Meeting are Lars
Berg, Barbara Donoghue, Karin Forseke, Mattias Miksche, Harald Strømme and Simon
Waldman. Luca Majocchi has declined re-election. 

As Chairman, re-election of Lars Berg is proposed.

New election is proposed of Thomas Axén, born 1960, since 2008 President of the
Nordic retail group Åhlénsgruppen and previously served as CEO of Bonnier
Dagstidningar (Bonnier Newspapers). Thomas Axén has also worked for McKinsey.

The Nomination Committee for the 2010 Annual General Meeting consists of Jan
Andersson, Swedbank Robur Funds, Hans Ek, SEB Funds, Peter Rudman, Nordea
Investment Funds, Pia Axelsson, Fourth Swedish National Pension Fund and Lars
Berg, Chairman of the Eniro Board of Directors. Jan Andersson is Chairman of the
Nomination Committee.

The Nomination Committee's complete proposal will be presented in conjunction
with the notification of the Annual General Meeting.

More  information: 
Åsa Wallenberg, Investor Relations, tel: +46 8 553 310 66, mobil: +46 70 361 34
09
Jan Andersson, Swedbank Robur Funds, mobil: +46 76 139 55 00

www.eniro.com


Eniro is the leading directory and search company in the Nordic media market.
Eniro's search database connects sellers to buyers and makes it easy to find
people using Eniro´s distribution channels Online, Printed directories, Voice
and mobile. Eniro has operations in Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark and Poland.

Eniro is listed on the Stockholm Stock Exchange and has some 5,000 employees. In
2009, revenues amounted to SEK 6,581 M, with EBITDA SEK 1,807 M