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Carlos Ghosn DPA/PA Images
on the run

Carlos Ghosn escape: Lebanon receives Interpol wanted notice for Nissan ex-chairman who fled Japan

Carlos Ghosn, formerly a giant of the motor industry, faced charges of financial misconduct.

LAST UPDATE | Jan 2nd 2020, 1:30 PM

LEBANON HAS RECEIVED an international wanted notice from Interpol for Nissan’s ex-chairman Carlos Ghosn, the country’s justice minister said.

Albert Serhan told the Associated Press that the Red Notice for the former automotive titan was received earlier today by the prosecution.

Ghosn skipped bail before a trial in Japan on financial misconduct charges and fled to Lebanon via Turkey.

Authorities have said that he entered legally on a French passport.

Interpol’s so-called Red Notices are requests to law enforcement agencies worldwide that they locate and provisionally arrest a wanted fugitive.

Serhan said the Lebanese prosecution “will carry out its duties”, suggesting for the first time that Ghosn may be brought in for questioning.

But he said that Lebanon and Japan do not have an extradition treaty, ruling out the possibility that Beirut would hand Ghosn over to Japan.

Earlier, officials raided the Tokyo residence of former Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn who fled to Lebanon to avoid a Japanese trial, while Turkey have detained several people as part of a widening probe into the security lapse.

Ghosn, who faced multiple charges of financial misconduct that he denies, won bail in April but with strict conditions – including a ban on overseas travel.

But the disgraced executive, who has French, Brazilian and Lebanese nationalities, managed to slip out of Japan on Sunday despite having handed over his three passports to his lawyers.

A court in Tokyo had allowed Ghosn to keep a second French passport as he needed one to travel inside Japan, a source close to the matter said.

“He had to keep this passport” to prove his short-stay status, the source said, adding: “There was permission from the court.”

Ghosn was allowed this French passport so long as it was kept in a locked case with the code held by his lawyers, the source said.

There is no emigration data showing Ghosn’s departure from Japan but he entered Lebanon on a French passport, public broadcaster NHK said.

He is thought to have taken a private jet from Kansai Airport in western Japan on 29 December, heading for Istanbul. It is believed Ghosn headed from there to Beirut.

Turkey’s interior ministry has opened an investigation into Ghosn’s apparent transfer between private jets at an Istanbul airport on Monday.

Officials questioned seven people, including four pilots, as part of the probe, news agency DHA reported today.

Residence raided

Prosecutors, meanwhile, raided his former Tokyo residence today as part of an initial investigation into his escape.

Television footage showed several officers in dark suits entering the property.

Authorities are expected to analyse security camera footage from his residence and other places they suspect Ghosn travelled to before he fled, NHK said.

Police suspect “several” people accompanied him to help him escape “in an unlawful manner,” it added.

The Japanese government has yet to issue any official statement on the case.

When his defence lawyers were arguing for bail, prosecutors claimed he was a flight risk with powerful connections, but Ghosn himself said he wanted to be tried to prove his innocence.

One of his lawyers also said at the time that he was such a famous face he had no chance of slipping away undetected.

Several countries allow people to have two passports of the same nationality – for example if they are frequent travellers constantly needing visas, or visit nations in conflict with each other.

The Japanese government is likely to ask Lebanon to extradite Ghosn through diplomatic channels, but chances of his handover appear slim as Beiruit has no extradition accord with Tokyo.

The French government said today it would not extradite Ghosn if he arrived in the country because it does not extradite its nationals.

- With reporting from AFP

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