Because last time i bought a share in NYSE, NYSE owner did not decide on his own if a listing will begin trading, at what price, under whose authority and without any communication with the company itself.
I think you have it backwards. Once sold, shares are no longer the company's property. The company has no right to stop shareholders from trading their shares. And you should know that it is not the stock exchange that fixes the price of stocks traded there.
For all I know, someone from Neo & Bee
warned Havelock of "susppicious activity" and
Havelock decided to suspend trading for prudence. But since there was no further information, they rightfully resumed trading. The suspension, not the resumption, violated investor's rights.