Hindustan Times (East UP)

Nissan ex-CEO tells Japanese court Ghosn’s pay was too low

- Feedback@livemint.com AP

TOKYO: Former Nissan chief executive Hiroto Saikawa told a Japanese court Wednesday he believed the compensati­on for his predecesso­r Carlos Ghosn was too low “by internatio­nal standards,” and so he supported Ghosn’s retirement packages to prevent him from leaving.

“Mr. Ghosn had outstandin­g abilities and achievemen­ts,” Saikawa said, testifying in Tokyo district court in the criminal trial of Greg Kelly, a former senior executive at Nissan Motor Co.

“We needed to prepare for Mr. Ghosn’s eventual retirement to keep him motivated and to have him continue to work for Nissan,” he said in answer to a prosecutor’s questionin­g.

Saikawa worked closely with Ghosn and succeeded Ghosn as CEO in 2017. After Ghosn was arrested in November 2018, he denounced Ghosn.

Saikawa resigned in September 2019 after questions over his own compensati­on surfaced. He denied wrongdoing and was not charged.

He struck a sympatheti­c tone Tuesday, telling the court he signed several draft documents on remunerati­on packages for Ghosn, including retirement pay, consultant fees and a noncompete agreement to prevent him from moving to a competitor.

Kelly, who was overseeing the compensati­on plans, is asserting his innocence in the trial that began last year. An American, he has been charged with financial misconduct in failing to fully disclose Ghosn’s future compensati­on. No one at Nissan apart from Ghosn and Kelly has been charged.

Ghosn led Nissan for two decades, salvaging the Japanese automaker from the brink of collapse. He is accused of under-reporting his income by about 1 billion yen ($10 million) a year over several years and of breach of trust.

In the cross-examinatio­n by Kelly’s defence lawyer Yoichi Kitamura, Saikawa said the several documents he signed were not about Ghosn’s unpaid compensati­on but for services after Ghosn’s retirement. Saikawa stressed the documents were drafts with blank dates to be inserted later, and they would have become official contracts only when Ghosn left Nissan.

When asked why he signed the documents, Saikawa said he trusted Kelly.

“He is an expert and a profession­al, and he was coming up with the proposals with an understand­ing of the overall process. If he was saying it, there could be no mistake,” Saikawa told the court. Witnesses and prosecutor­s have said Ghosn took a pay cut to about half of what he’d been getting after the law started requiring such disclosure­s to securities authoritie­s in 2010. Ghosn also says he is innocent. He fled while out on bail in late 2019, and is now in Lebanon, which has no extraditio­n treaty with Japan.

Separately, Japan is seeking the extraditio­n of Michael Taylor and his son Peter Taylor, accused of smuggling Ghosn out of Japan. They are now being held in a suburban Boston jail. Earlier this month, a US judge cleared the way for the two to be handed over to Japan.

Kelly’s trial, before a panel of three judges, is expected to last for several more months. More than 99% of Japanese criminal trials result in conviction­s.

 ??  ?? Carlos Ghosn is accused of under-reporting his income by about $10 million a year over several years and of breach of trust.
Carlos Ghosn is accused of under-reporting his income by about $10 million a year over several years and of breach of trust.

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