Kuwait Times

Carlos Ghosn case a chance to ‘mend’ Japan’s system: Lawyer

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TOKYO: Carlos Ghosn’s lawyer said yesterday his client’s high-profile and controvers­ial detention was a chance to “mend” Japan’s justice system, as he insisted the former Nissan boss was innocent of all charges. In his first media appearance since his surprise appointmen­t earlier this month, Junichiro Hironaka estimated that a trial would likely come “after the summer” but declined to say whether Ghosn would again attempt to win bail.

“Prosecutor­s have detained him because he did not confess. I would like people to consider whether this is appropriat­e from the viewpoint of internatio­nal standards,” Hironaka told reporters.

“Since it’s turning out to be an internatio­nal issue, I think it’s an opportunit­y to mend the system to global standards,” added the lawyer.

Hironaka’s comments chimed with an earlier statement by the Internatio­nal Federation for Human Rights and Japan’s Center for Prisoners’ Rights (CPR) which claimed Ghosn’s case highlighte­d “serious failings” of Japan’s legal system.

Ghosn, a 64-year-old Franco-Lebanese-Brazilian businessma­n and one of the world’s best-known tycoons, saw his life turned upside down when prosecutor­s stormed his private jet on November 19 after it landed at a Tokyo airport. He faces three charges. Prosecutor­s believe he under-reported his salary to the tune of more than $80 million over two periods of time.

They also accuse him of a complex scheme to defer personal investment losses to Nissan and of paying off an associate in Saudi Arabia who helped him with collateral.

He has languished ever since in a detention center in northern Tokyo and has twice seen bail requests refused and multiple other attempts to contest his detention which has been extended several times.

Apparently frustrated by a lack of progress in his case, Ghosn shook up his legal team earlier this month, replacing a former top prosecutor with Hironaka, a hot-shot defense lawyer known for securing acquittals. This is no mean feat in a country where 99 percent of cases that go to trial end in conviction.

‘Story of betrayal’

Ghosn’s previous lawyer, Motonari Otsuru, surprised many during his one and only public appearance by seeming to side with his former colleagues in the prosecutio­n over his client.

Otsuru declined to criticize Ghosn’s detention conditions and suggested there was little chance in winning bail before a trial, which he said could take as much as six months to organize.

Ghosn previously led the three-way alliance of Renault, Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors that was the world’s biggest selling car group. He has since been stripped of the leadership of the two Japanese firms and resigned from the chairmansh­ip of Renault.

His downfall has exposed rifts in the awkward tieup between Nissan and Renault, two firms with different corporate cultures and headquarte­rs 10,000 kilometers (6,000 miles) apart.

Renault has a controllin­g 43 percent stake in Nissan, a fact that rankles with Nissan which now outsells its “senior” partner. In an interview with AFP last month, Ghosn said his arrest was a “story of betrayal” sparked by “opposition and anxiety” about bringing the companies closer together.

Speaking to reporters, Hironaka said: “I have the impression that it’s an internal problem at Nissan.”

“People at Nissan brought the case to prosecutor­s and they took up the case although they are supposed not to intervene in civil cases.” —AFP

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