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FORMER NISSAN BOSS GHOSN SAYS HE IS WRONGLY ACCUSED

▶ Claims he failed to disclose income and passed on trading losses rejected on first day in court

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Carlos Ghosn rejected claims he failed to disclose income from Nissan Motor and passed on trading losses to the car maker, in his first public comments since his shock arrest almost two months ago.

“I have been wrongly accused and unfairly detained based on meritless and unsubstant­iated accusation­s,” he said in Tokto yesterday. “I have acted honourably, legally and with the knowledge and approval of the appropriat­e executives inside the company – with the sole purpose of strengthen­ing Nissan.”

The former Nissan chairman, once feted as the company’s saviour, appeared in a navy blue suit and white shirt and seemed to have lost weight, according to local broadcaste­rs.

Yesterday’s hearing at a Tokyo district court was the first chance for Mr Ghosn to give his side of the story. He told the court that contrary to the accusation­s made by prosecutor­s, he received no compensati­on from Nissan that was not disclosed.

Draft proposals for post-retirement compensati­on were reviewed by internal and external lawyers, showing he had no intent to break the law, according to a statement.

He asked Nissan to take on collateral linked to foreign-exchange forward contracts “as it came to no cost to the company” and the contracts were then transferre­d back to him without the car maker incurring any loss. The contracts were entered into because the company paid him in yen while he preferred dollar income.

He said he has always acted with integrity and has never been accused of any wrongdoing in his profession­al career.

After weeks in jail, the executive’s public defence – in his own words – was highly anticipate­d. Moe than 1,122 tickets were handed out yesterday in a lottery to attend Mr Ghosn’s hearing – about 80 times oversubscr­ibed – for the 14 public seats available in the courtroom gallery.

The high-profile executive was the architect of the alliance between Nissan, France’s Renault and Mitsubishi Motors. While he was dismissed as Nissan chairman shortly after his arrest, Renault has kept him on as chairman and chief executive because it needs evidence of wrongdoing.

And his appearance lends a new dimension to a legal battle that has been largely one-sided. Accusation­s against him have layered up and his confinemen­t has repeatedly been extended. He was rearrested on new charges on December 21, just when it looked like he may be able to apply for bail.

“I look forward to beginning the process of defending myself against the accusation­s that have been made against me,” he said.

Mr Ghosn sought to highlight his loyalty to Nissan and he spoke of “a genuine love and appreciati­on” for the company. He said four major companies tried to recruit him while he was Nissan chief. He even named some of the people who contacted him – Bill Ford at Ford Motor, and Steve Rattner, the Obama administra­tion’s car czar at the time, who tapped Mr Ghosn for a position at General Motors.

Mr Ghosn turned them down. “Even though their proposals were very attractive, I could not in good conscience abandon Nissan while we were in the midst of our turnaround,” he said.

Meanwhile, a Saudi partner of Nissan came to the defence of Mr Ghosn after a $14.7 million payment to the Middle Eastern company came under the scrutiny of prosecutor­s in the investigat­ion. The transactio­n over four years was for legitimate business purposes, the company said.

Yesterday’s sessions followed a request by Mr Ghosn’s legal team for the court to explain why he remains in detention.

If proven, each of Mr Ghosn’s alleged offences may carry a sentence of as much as 10 years, prosecutor­s have said. Nissan has also accused Mr Ghosn of misusing company funds, including over homes from Brazil to Lebanon and hiring his sister on an advisory contract.

I have acted honourably, legally and with the knowledge and approval of the executives inside the company

 ?? EPA ?? A screen displaying a courtroom drawing of former Nissan chairman Carlos Ghosn attending a court hearing in Tokyo yesterday
EPA A screen displaying a courtroom drawing of former Nissan chairman Carlos Ghosn attending a court hearing in Tokyo yesterday

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