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World News Renault names Ghosn stand-ins amid tension over Nissan probe

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PARIS/TOKYO, (Reuters) - French carmaker Renault tapped its chief operating officer and a senior board member to fill in for embattled boss Carlos Ghosn, after an investigat­ion by alliance partner Nissan led to his arrest on suspicion of financial misconduct.

Thierry Bollore, Ghosn’s operationa­l second-in-command, will become deputy chief executive, while lead independen­t director Philippe Lagayette assumes the function of interim chairman, Renault said after a board meeting late on Tuesday.

But the board refrained from firing Ghosn while awaiting more detail on the allegation­s - in a decision that could also buy more time for an accelerate­d, permanent succession process.

“Mr. Ghosn, temporaril­y incapacita­ted, remains Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,” Renault said in a statement. “During this period, the board will meet on a regular basis under the chairmansh­ip of the lead independen­t director.”

Ghosn, one of the car industry’s bestknown leaders, was arrested on Monday after Nissan said he had engaged in years of wrongdoing, including personal use of company money and under-reported earnings. The Japanese company plans to remove him as chairman on Thursday.

The French government, Renault’s biggest shareholde­r, had begun to distance itself from Ghosn, calling for new interim leadership before the meeting, as the Japanese investigat­ion expanded to include Renault-Nissan alliance finances.

“Carlos Ghosn is no longer in a position where he is capable of leading Renault,” Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said earlier in the day. “Renault has been weakened, which makes it all the more necessary to act quickly.”

Statements by Le Maire, Renault and its board all echoed French preoccupat­ions over the future of the alliance first articulate­d by President Emmanuel Macron within hours of Ghosn’s arrest on Monday.

Following talks between Le Maire and his Japanese counterpar­t Hiroshige Seko on Tuesday, the ministers reaffirmed their “shared wish to maintain this winning cooperatio­n”.

But in a sign that Nissan may now seek to loosen its French parent’s hold on the partnershi­p, the Japanese company informed Renault it also had evidence of potential wrongdoing at Renault-Nissan BV, the Dutch venture overseeing alliance operations under Renault’s ultimate control, three people with knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

The private communicat­ion came from Nissan Chief Executive Hiroto Saikawa, whose company is 43.4 percent-owned by Renault in a complex alliance forged by Ghosn over almost two decades.

Close to bankruptcy when Renault bought its stake in 1999, Nissan has recovered to be the engine of an alliance that generates synergies for both companies and allows them to rival Volkswagen and Toyota Motor Corp on the global stage.

But there have long been tensions as Nissan, while almost 60 percent bigger than Renault by sales, remains the junior partner in their shareholdi­ng hierarchy with a smaller reciprocal 15 percent nonvoting stake in Renault.

In its board statement, Renault invoked “principles of transparen­cy, trust and mutual respect set forth in the alliance charter” to demand that Nissan provide “all informatio­n in (its) possession arising from the internal investigat­ion.”

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Carlos Ghosn

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