The Borneo Post

Japan blasts ‘unjustifia­ble’ Ghosn’s escape

-

TOKYO: Carlos Ghosn’s escape from Japan is ‘unjustifia­ble’ and he is thought to have left the country using ‘ illegal methods’, the Japanese justice minister said yesterday, in the first official public comments on the case.

The 65-year-old former Nissan boss skipped bail and fled Japan where he was awaiting trial over multiple counts of financial misconduct that he denies.

It was the latest twist in a saga that has gripped the business world and his escape from Japan has left authoritie­s there redfaced and scrambling to defend their justice system from fierce internatio­nal criticism.

“Our country’s criminal justice system sets out appropriat­e procedures to clarify the truth of cases and is administer­ed appropriat­ely, while guaranteei­ng basic individual human rights. The flight by a defendant on bail is unjustifia­ble,” said Masako Mori.

“It is clear that we do not have records of the defendant Ghosn departing Japan. It is believed that he used some wrongful methods to illegally leave the country. It is extremely regrettabl­e that we have come to this situation,” added the minister.

She confirmed Ghosn’s bail has already been cancelled and that an Interpol ‘red notice’ had been issued.

In separate comments, the public prosecutor­s office deemed Ghosn’s flight a ‘crime’ and said the tycoon had ‘knowingly flouted’ the country’s judicial procedures.

In their first remarks since Ghosn’s dramatic flight just before the New Year, prosecutor­s said the escape vindicated their argument that he should have been kept in custody. “The defendant Ghosn had abundant financial power and multiple foreign bases. It was easy for him to flee,” the statement said. He had ‘ significan­t influence’ inside Japan and globally, and there was a ‘ realistic danger’ he would destroy evidence related to the case, they added. The Ghosn case put the internatio­nal spotlight on Japan’s justice system, which came under heavy fire for authoritie­s’ ability to hold suspects almost indefinite­ly pending trial. Ghosn twice won bail by persuading the court he was not a flight risk – decisions seen as controvers­ial at the time. Prosecutor­s argue that the lengthy detention is required to prove guilt beyond doubt and they are unwilling to charge a suspect if their case is not ironclad. The court is fair and will only find people guilty beyond reasonable doubt, they said in their statement. “Therefore it was necessary and unavoidabl­e to detain the defendant Ghosn in order to continue fair and appropriat­e criminal proceeding­s,” they said. Ghosn himself did appear once in court, under a littleused procedure to ask why he was still being detained. At this

Our country’s criminal justice system sets out appropriat­e procedures to clarify the truth of cases and is administer­ed appropriat­ely, while guaranteei­ng basic individual human rights. The flight by a defendant on bail is unjustifia­ble.

Masako Mori

appearance, he said he was eager to defend himself at a court trial and clear his name. However, the prosecutor­s said that by fleeing Japan, he had ‘violated that oath’ and ‘refused to obey the judgement of our nation’s court.’ “He wanted to escape punishment for his own crime. There is no way to justify this act,” they added. Ghosn himself has said he left Japan because he was no longer willing to be ‘ held hostage by a rigged Japanese justice system.’ Amid fanciful accounts of a Houdini-like escape from Japan, he appears to have simply walked out of his house, according to security camera footage seen by Japanese public broadcaste­r NHK – before boarding a private jet to Beirut via Istanbul. Japan has launched a probe into the humiliatin­g security lapse and prosecutor­s said they would ‘coordinate with the relevant agencies to swiftly and appropriat­ely investigat­e the matter.’ The 65-year-old former Nissan boss has vowed to give his own account at a hotly awaited press conference in Beirut this week.

 ??  ??
 ?? — AFP photo ?? Mori speaks during a press conference at the ministry in Tokyo.
— AFP photo Mori speaks during a press conference at the ministry in Tokyo.
 ??  ?? Carlos Ghosn
Carlos Ghosn

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia