Jamaica Gleaner

Nissan’s ex-chair Ghosn appears in court, asserts innocence

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THE FORMER chairman of Japan’s Nissan Motor Co, Carlos Ghosn, denied any wrongdoing and proclaimed his loyalty to the company at a court hearing in Tokyo on Tuesday.

It was Ghosn’s first public appearance since he was arrested on November 19 and charged with false financial reporting.

“Your Honour, I am innocent of the accusation­s against me,” Ghosn told the judge, speaking firmly and calmly as he read from a statement. “I am wrongfully accused.”

Prosecutor­s have charged Ghosn, who led a dramatic turnaround at the Japanese automaker over the past two decades, with falsifying financial reports in under-reporting his income by about ¥5 billion ($44 million) over five years through 2015.

They also say he is suspected of having Nissan temporaril­y take on his investment losses from the financial crisis.

Wearing plastic slippers and a dark suit without a tie, Ghosn rebutted the allegation­s against him point-by-point and said he had the option to leave Nissan, but had decided to stay on.

“A captain doesn’t jump ship during a storm,” said Ghosn, who was visibly thinner than before his arrest.

The veteran auto executive, a familiar face at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, and other elite gatherings, was handcuffed and led into the courtroom with a rope around his waist as the hearing began. Officers removed his handcuffs and seated him on a bench.

Presiding Judge Yuichi Tada then read out the charges and said Ghosn, a Brazilian-born Frenchman of Lebanese ancestry, was considered a flight risk – he was arrested on his arrival in Tokyo by private jet – and might try to hide evidence.

In Japan, suspects are routinely held without bail, often due to fears about evidence tampering.

During Tuesday’s hearing, Go Kondo, one of Ghosn’s lawyers, argued he was not a flight risk.

“He’s widely known, so it’s difficult for him to escape. There is no risk that the suspect will destroy evidence,” he said.

Facing the courtroom, Ghosn spoke proudly of the automaker’s – and his own – achievemen­ts, such as reviving iconic models like the GT-R and the Z, expanding operations in China, Russia, Brazil and India, and pioneering electric cars and autonomous driving.

“I have a genuine love and appreciati­on for Nissan,” he said.

Ghosn has been held in spartan conditions at a Tokyo detention facility since he was taken into custody. However, Ghosn’s defence lawyer, Motonari Ohtsuru, told reporters at the Foreign Correspond­ents’ Club late Tuesday that Ghosn was transferre­d to a bigger room with a bed at his request.

In keeping with Japanese regulation­s, he has been allowed visits only from his lawyers and consular officials.

Ghosn said he had “acted honourably, legally and with the knowledge and approval of the appropriat­e executives inside the company, with the sole purpose of supporting and strengthen­ing Nissan,” according to a statement released to some media, including The Associated Press, before the hearing and confirmed by his legal team.

 ??  ?? Nissan Motor Company’s former chairman, Carlos Ghosn.
Nissan Motor Company’s former chairman, Carlos Ghosn.

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