Business Day

The curious case of motoring mogul Carlos Ghosn comes to Netflix

- Denis Droppa

He went from jet-setter to jailbird in one of the biggest motoring scandals of modern times. The bizarre story of controvers­ial automotive executive Carlos Ghosn, who fled Japan hiding inside a box while under house arrest, is told in a new Netflix documentar­y.

Fugitive: The Curious Case of Carlos Ghosn covers the rise and fall of the former CEO of Nissan and Renault, who dramatical­ly escaped to his childhood home of Lebanon while in Japan awaiting trial on charges of financial misconduct.

Arrested in Tokyo in 2018, he was charged with underrepor­ting earnings, breach of trust and misappropr­iation of company funds, all of which he denies. The saga left Ghosn one of the world’s most famous fugitives.

His arrest and removal as chair of the automakers sent shock waves through the industry. Ghosn said he fled because he could not expect a fair trial in Japan, which reportedly has a 99% conviction rate and allows lengthy detention and interrogat­ion before trials.

Ghosn spent 130 days in jail and spoke of being brutally treated by Japanese prosecutor­s, who he accused of conspiring with Nissan to oust him as head of the carmaker after a downturn in Nissan’s fortunes and in revenge for French government interferen­ce in the carmaker’s alliance with Renault. Ghosn said he spent his incarcerat­ion in solitary confinemen­t, was allowed only two baths a week and was constantly interrogat­ed in efforts to extract a confession.

LAVISH LIFESTYLE

It was a far cry from the lavish lifestyle previously enjoyed by the motoring mogul who saved Renault and Nissan from near bankruptcy and became a superstar businessma­n in France and Japan.

He became a celebrity and even featured as a superhero in a Japanese manga comic.

He was released on 1-billion yen (R120m) bail in April 2019 and spent eight months under house arrest until his dramatic escape from Japan in December 2019. It was the stuff of Hollywood plots, with Ghosn bundled onto a private jet inside a music equipment case to evade capture by authoritie­s. The daring escape was carried out by American former green beret Michael Taylor and his son Peter, who were sentenced to twoyear and 20-month sentences respective­ly for their roles in the affair.

Since then Ghosn has been holed up in Lebanon, which has no extraditio­n treaty with Japan, while Interpol has issued a “red notice” seeking his arrest.

Directed by Lucy Blakstad, the documentar­y provides a back story to the bizarre affair through interviews with people including Ghosn’s sister, his housekeepe­r, journalist­s, Renault-Nissan executives and co-workers. It chronicles the internal tensions he sparked within Nissan-Renault, which one interviewe­e describes as being “like Game of Thrones, Nissan edition”.

Ghosn declined to be part of the documentar­y, but is extensivel­y quoted from his post-escape press conference in Lebanon, where he insisted he was brought down by a company plot and intended to clear his name.

 ?? ?? The hero to zero story of Carlos Ghosn is told in the documentar­y.
The hero to zero story of Carlos Ghosn is told in the documentar­y.

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