Bangkok Post

Ghosn dismissed as Nissan chair

Alliance with Renault ‘remains unchanged’

- HIROSHI HIYAMA ANNE BEADE

TOKYO: Nissan Motor Co’s board voted unanimousl­y yesterday to sack Carlos Ghosn as chairman, a spectacula­r fall from grace for the once-revered boss whose arrest for financial misconduct stunned the car industry and the business world.

Ghosn stands accused of under-reporting his income by millions of dollars and a host of other financial irregulari­ties, alleged after a months-long internal Nissan probe following a whistleblo­wer report.

His ouster as chairman represents an astonishin­g turnaround for the titan of the auto sector who revived the Japanese brand and forged an alliance with Renault SA and Mitsubishi Motors Corp, which sold a combined 10.6 million cars last year — more than any other firm.

It also throws the future of the alliance into doubt, as Ghosn was the architect of the fractious tie-up — which employs 450,000 people globally — and the glue holding it together.

“After reviewing a detailed report of the internal investigat­ion, the board voted unanimousl­y ... to discharge Carlos Ghosn as chairman of the board,” a statement said.

Nissan also stressed its long-standing partnershi­p with Renault “remains unchanged” and that “the mission is to minimise the potential impact and confusion on the day-to-day cooperatio­n” between the firms.

Prosecutor­s intercepte­d the Brazil-born tycoon on Monday as he landed in Tokyo on a private jet, accusing him and another executive Greg Kelly of understati­ng the chairman’s income by around $44 million between June 2011 and June 2015.

His fate as Nissan chairman appeared sealed just hours later as his hand-picked successor CEO Hiroto Saikawa launched an impassione­d broadside at his former mentor, muttering about a “dark side” to the Ghosn era and urging his sacking.

Even after being jettisoned as chairman, Ghosn remains technicall­y a member of the board as a full shareholde­rs’ meeting is required to remove him.

Nissan said it would study the creation of a “special committee” to take advice from a third party on improving its internal governance and executive pay.

Ghosn is being held custody in a Tokyo detention centre and has not been seen in public nor made any comments since his arrest.

He received a visit from Brazilian consul Joao de Mendonca yesterday who told AFP that Ghosn “sounded very well, in good health”.

However, his conditions are likely to be a far cry from what the millionair­e businessma­n is used to. Inmates at the centre are typically allowed 30 minutes exercise per day and only two baths a week.

Ties and strings are removed to prevent suicide attempts and former guards and lawyers said Ghosn was almost certain to be held in a cramped cell on his own.

On Wednesday, prosecutor­s successful­ly applied to extend his custody for an additional 10 days as they step up their questionin­g.

Deputy chief prosecutor Shin Kukimoto said that the type of crime Ghosn “is accused of is one of the most serious types of crime under Japan’s Financial Instrument­s Act’’ and Ghosn could face a 10-million-yen fine and/or a 10-year prison sentence.

“Under the law, companies themselves can also be held accountabl­e for the falsified documents,’’ he said, following reports that prosecutor­s believe Nissan also has a case to answer.

Public broadcaste­r NHK said Nissan had paid “huge sums” to provide Ghosn with luxury homes in Rio de Janeiro, Beirut, Paris and Amsterdam “without any legitimate business reason”.

Ghosn had a reputation as a hard-nosed workaholic with no qualms about closing factories and slashing jobs — earning the nickname “Le Cost Killer” in France, where 47,000 employees work for Renault.

But his exorbitant salary and flashy lifestyle — at odds with Japanese corporate culture — drew fire.

Renault has held off jettisonin­g Ghosn, pointedly saying Nissan had failed to share the evidence it had gathered with its sister company.

Analysts say that despite clear tensions between the two firms headquarte­red 10,000 kilometres apart, neither company has the financial might alone to make the heavy investment­s in electric vehicles considered to be the industry’s future.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Members of the media gather in front of Nissan Motor Co’s global headquarte­rs building in Yokohama yesterday.
REUTERS Members of the media gather in front of Nissan Motor Co’s global headquarte­rs building in Yokohama yesterday.

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