Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 3, 2020, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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B EIRUT — Interpol issued a wanted notice Thursday for former Nissan chairman Carlos Ghosn, who jumped bail in Japan and
fled to Lebanon rather than face trial on financial
misconduct charges in a dramatic escape that has
confounded and embarrassed authorities.
Lebanese Justice Minister Albert Serhan told
The Associated Press in an interview that Leba-
non “will carry out its duties,” suggesting for the
first time the automotive titan may be brought
in for questioning. But he said Ghosn entered the
country on a legal passport, and he appeared to
cast doubt on the possibility Lebanon would hand
Ghosn over to Japan.
The Interpol notice is the latest twist in Ghosn’s
daring escape, which spanned three continents
and involved private planes, multiple passports
and international intrigue. Turkey made several
arrests Thursday as part of an investigation into
how he passed through the country.
Ghosn’s arrival in Lebanon jolted the nation, al-
ready in the midst of a crippling political impasse
and its worst economic crisis in decades.
Lebanon must now decide how to deal with the
Interpol-issued Red Notice, which is a non-bind-
ing request to law enforcement agencies world-
wide that they locate and provisionally arrest a
fugitive. A Red Notice is not an arrest warrant
and does not require Lebanon to arrest Ghosn.
Shortly afterward, Ghosn issued a statement
— his second this week — seeking to distance his
Lebanese wife and family from any role in his
escape.
“The allegations in the media that my wife
Carole and other members of my family played
a role in my departure from Japan are false and
misleading. I alone organized my departure. My
family played no role,” he said.
Ghosn, who is Lebanese and also holds French
and Brazilian passports, was set to go on trial in
Japan in April. He arrived in Lebanon on Monday
via Turkey and hasn’t been seen in public since.
In a statement Tuesday, he said he fled to avoid
“political persecution” by a “rigged Japanese
justice system.”
How he was able to flee Japan, avoiding the
tight surveillance he was under while free on
US$14 million bail, is still a mystery, though
Lebanese authorities have said he entered the
country legally on a French passport.
Ghosn, who grew up in Beirut and frequently
visited, is a national hero to many in this
Mediterranean country with close ties to senior
politicians and business stakes in a number of
companies. People take special pride in the auto
industry executive, who is credited with leading
a spectacular turnaround at Nissan beginning in
the late 1990s and rescuing the automaker from
near-bankruptcy.
Even as he fell from grace internationally,
politicians across the board mobilized in his de-
fence after his arrest in Japan in November 2018,
with some suggesting his detention may be part
of a political or business-motivated conspiracy.
Lebanon’s foreign minister repeatedly called for
his release.
Serhan said prosecutors will summon Ghosn
and listen to him, and “at a later stage if there are
any measures to be taken, then the precautionary
measures will be taken.”
“We are a country of law and respect the law
and ... I can confirm that the Lebanese state will
implement the law,” the justice minister said.
At the same time, Serhan said that Lebanon has
not received an official extradition request from
Japan, and he noted that the two countries do not
have an extradition treaty.
“Mr. Ghosn arrived to Lebanon as any ordinary
citizen. ... Lebanese authorities have no security
or judiciary charges against him. He entered
the border like any other Lebanese using a legal
passport,” he added.
There were mixed reactions in Lebanon to
Ghosn’s return, with some cheering his freedom
and others lamenting his arrival as yet another
“corrupt’’ Lebanese to contend with.
“I like this man. He has a brain and he devel-
oped Nissan and Renault from the ground up. He
came back to his mother country which embraced
him,” said Ghassan al-Baba, a 52-year-old taxi
driver and former employee of General Motors in
Kuwait.
“He is a part of the corrupt, but the corrupt
from the outside. Here, he didn’t do anything
wrong. On the contrary, he is going to bring mon-
ey to Lebanon,” he said, reflecting a longstanding
Lebanese hope that Ghosn would one day help
rescue Lebanon’s failing economy.
In Turkey, the state-run Anadolu Agency said
Turkish authorities detained seven people as
part of an investigation into how Ghosn fled to
Lebanon via Istanbul. The private DHA news
agency reported that those detained are four
pilots, a cargo company manager and two airport
workers.
Meanwhile, prosecutors in Japan raided
Ghosn’s Tokyo home.
Japanese public broadcaster NHK TV, with-
out identifying sources, reported Thursday that
Ghosn had two French passports.
Japanese news reports said there were no of-
ficial records in Japan of Ghosn’s departure but
that a private jet had left from a regional airport
to Turkey. The Hurriyet newspaper said the plane
carrying Ghosn landed at Istanbul’s Ataturk
Airport at 5:30 a.m. on Dec. 29. Ghosn was not
registered upon landing and was smuggled onto
another plane that left for Lebanon, the paper
reported.
Ghosn, who is charged in Japan with under-
reporting his future compensation and breach
of trust, has repeatedly asserted his innocence,
saying authorities trumped up charges to prevent
a possible fuller merger between Nissan Motor
Co. and Renault.
In Beirut’s affluent residential neighbour-
hood of Ashrafieh, several security guards stood
outside Ghosn’s rose-colored mansion Thursday
along with about two dozen journalists. Since
news of his arrival, journalists, including many
from the Japanese media, have flocked outside
the building, trying to capture any proof of his
presence.
—The Associated Press
‘Red Notice’ issued for former Nissan chairman who jumped bail in Japan and fled to Lebanon
Interpol chasing escape artist Ghosn
BASSEM MROUE AND AJ NADDAFF
MAYA ALLERUZZO / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A security guard (centre) stands as journalists film through the garage window of Carlos Ghosn’s mansion in Beirut.
‘Lebanese authorities have no
security or judiciary charges
against him’
— Lebanese Justice Minister Albert Serhan, on Ghosn
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