Japan Issues Arrest Warrant for Ex-Nissan Wife
Tokyo
prosecutors have issued an arrest warrant for the wife of fugitive ex-Nissan
boss Carlos Ghosn.
Carole Ghosn
is suspected of making false statements to a Tokyo court in April,
investigators said.
Mr Ghosn
skipped bail in December, joining his wife in Beirut.
A
spokeswoman for the Ghosn family said the arrest warrant for Mrs Ghosn was
"pathetic", and was linked to a news conference due to be given by Mr
Ghosn on Wednesday.
Japan is
seeking Mr Ghosn's extradition from Lebanon, although the country does not have
a treaty with Japan.
A
spokeswoman for Mr Ghosn told Reuters: "Last time Carlos Ghosn announced a
press conference and got re-arrested. This time, the day before he is announced
to speak out freely for the first time, they issued an arrest warrant for his wife
Carole Ghosn."
"The
issuance of this warrant is pathetic," she added.
Mr Ghosn ran
car giant Nissan until he was arrested in Japan on charges of financial
misconduct - which he denies - in November 2018.
He was
banned from seeing his wife while on bail. But, in the final days of 2019, he
skipped bail to board a private jet that took him to Turkey before he travelled
on to Lebanon, where he is a citizen, and where his wife was waiting.
Mr Ghosn
insisted he had organised his escape "alone", and denied reports his
wife had helped.
The arrest
warrant accuses Carole Ghosn of falsely claiming not to know, or to have met,
people connected to a company that received payments from Nissan, part of which
was subsequently transferred to a firm owned by Mr Ghosn.
Mr Ghosn has
denied charges of financial wrongdoing in Japan, instead claiming the country's
justice system is "rigged".
The news
conference scheduled for Wednesday will be Mr Ghosn's first since his arrest in
November 2018.
Mr
Ghosn told Fox Business that he has "actual evidence" that
proves there was a coup to stop him merging Nissan with French carmaker
Renault. He also said he would identify people at the news conference that he
believed were behind his arrest over financial misconduct.
In earlier
court filings and statements released by his lawyers in Japan, Mr Ghosn has
accused Nissan executives of colluding with Japanese
prosecutors and officials
from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry.
Mr Ghosn's
legal team in Japan also said prosecutors withheld evidence, citing concerns
voiced by Nissan that it included sensitive information about operations and
employees.
Nissan said
Mr Ghosn's flight from Japan would not affect its policy of holding him
responsible for "serious misconduct".
"The
company will continue to take appropriate legal action to hold [Mr] Ghosn
accountable for the harm that his misconduct has caused to Nissan," the
carmaker said.
FROM .bbc.com/news/business
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