Nissan to sack global chairman Carlos Ghosn over misconduct claims

Car giant Nissan has said it will dismiss chairman Carlos Ghosn after finding he under-reported his income 'over many years', among other allegations of misconduct.
Carlos Ghosn at the unveiling of the Sunderland-built Qashqai Mark IICarlos Ghosn at the unveiling of the Sunderland-built Qashqai Mark II
Carlos Ghosn at the unveiling of the Sunderland-built Qashqai Mark II

The Japanese company said the violations were discovered during an investigation over several months that was instigated by a whistleblower.

Mr Ghosn, 64, also allegedly engaged in personal use of company assets, it said.

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Nissan said it was providing information to the prosecutors and cooperating with their investigation. The allegations also concern another executive, representative director Greg Kelly.

Japanese media said Mr Ghosn voluntarily submitted to questioning by Tokyo prosecutors on Monday.

Meanwhile, the Japanese broadcaster NHK has reported Mr Ghosn has been arrested on suspicion of financial misconduct.

Nissan's chief executive Hiroto Saikawa planned to propose to its board that Ms Ghosn and Mr Kelly both be removed from their posts.

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"Nissan deeply apologises for causing great concern to our shareholders and stakeholders," said a company statement.

"We will continue our work to identify our governance and compliance issues, and to take appropriate measures," the company said in a statement.

The allegations are a serious blow at a time when Nissan and another alliance member, Mitsubishi Motor Co, are still overcoming scandals over their quality testing reporting.

Mr Ghosn is credited with helping engineer a remarkable turnaround at Nissan over the past two decades, resuscitating the Japanese carmaker from near bankruptcy after he was sent in by alliance partner Renault SA of France.

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He served as Nissan's chief executive from 2001 until April 2017, becoming chief executive of Renault in 2005, leading the two major carmakers simultaneously.

In 2016, Mr Ghosn became Mitsubishi Motors' chairman.

The Nissan-Renault-Mitsubishi group is among the biggest car alliances in the world, selling about 10 million vehicles a year.

Before joining Renault, Mr Ghosn worked for Michelin North America.

For the past two decades, he has maintained an unusually high profile in a nation where foreign chief executives of major Japanese companies are still relatively rare.

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Mr Ghosn has appeared on magazine covers dressed in a kimono, vowing to renew the Nissan brand.

He was widely praised in Japanese industry circles for delivering sorely needed cost cuts and introducing greater efficiency at a time when Nissan needed a fresh start.

It is unclear what, if anything, today's announcement means for the long-term future of Nissan's Sunderland plant.