Former Nissan chairman Carlos Ghosn denies salary fraud charges

Carlos Ghosn has denied allegations that he under-reported his salary, Japanese broadcaster NHK has reported.

Carlos Ghosn
Nissan's partner Renault has refrained from firing Ghosn as chairman [Steve Marcus/Reuters]

Former Nissan chairman Carlos Ghosn, who was arrested on Monday on suspicion of financial misconduct, has denied the allegations against him, Japanese broadcaster NHK has reported.

Nissan voted to remove Ghosn as chairman on Thursday after accusing the 64-year-old of “significant acts of misconduct”, including under-reporting his salary and using company assets for his personal benefit.

Ghosn, who has not spoken publicly, told investigators that he had no intention of under-reporting his salary on financial documents and has denied allegations against him, NHK said on Sunday, without giving sources.

Japanese prosecutors have said Ghosn and Greg Kelly, a former Nissan executive who has also been arrested, allegedly falsified the former’s compensation at Nissan over five years from 2010.

Kelly was quoted by NHK on Saturday as defending Ghosn’s compensation, saying it was discussed with other officials and paid out appropriately.

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According to the Financial Times, Ghosn was reportedly planning to strengthen a partnership between Nissan and Renault at the French government’s request, despite the Japanese firm’s strong reservations about it.

Ghosn served as CEO of Renault and, according to Reuters news agency, he was reportedly earning $8.4m from Renault, $6.5m from Nissan and $2m from Mitsubishi.

Source: Al Jazeera