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  • Nissan chairman Carlos Ghosn arrested over financial misconduct

    Reporters gather at Nissan's global HQ in Yokohama, Japan on Monday evening ahead of a news conference Reporters gather at Nissan's global HQ in Yokohama, Japan on Monday evening ahead of a news conference

    The Nissan chairman has been arrested on suspicion of falsifying financial reports. Brazilian-born Carlos Ghosn has rescued the Japanese automaker from near bankruptcy over the last 18 years.

    Nissan Motor Company said on Monday it was moving to fire Carlos Ghosn from his post as chairman after Japanese media reported he was arrested for using company money for personal use and engaging in other serious acts of misconduct.

    Ghosn, who heads the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi alliance, is suspected of failing to report hundreds of millions of yen (millions of euros, dollars) in income. He was arrested in Tokyo on violation of financial regulations including misreporting his income.

    Shares in French carmaker Renault plunged as much as 12 percent as the news of his alleged misconduct broke - Renault's lowest level in about four years.

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

    Ghosn's arrrest comes just five months after he narrowly won a shareholder vote at Renault over his 7.4 million euro ($8.5 million) pay package for 2017, after losing a 2016 vote. The 64-year-old helped turn the carmaker back from the brink of financial ruin 17 years ago and turned it into a global powerhouse, pushing it into electric cars.

    Appropriate Measures

    The allegations also involve Nissan's representative director Greg Kelly.

    Nissan's CEO, Hiroto Saikawa, said the board will meet on Thursday to vote on dismissing both Ghosn and Kelly. He identified three types of serious conduct: under-reporting income, using investment funds for personal gain and illicit use of company expenses.

    "This is an act that cannot be tolerated by the company," he said during a news briefing.

    The Nissan CEO told journalists that the scandal would not affect the automaker's alliance with Renault and Mitsubishi.

    "The partnership among the three entities will not be affected by this event, rather we will closely work together with all the partners to contain any possible confusion."

    French vigilance

    France's President Emmanuel Macron said his country would be extremely vigilant about the fate of Renault and its alliance with Nissan after Monday's events.

    Macron said that the French state, as a Renault shareholder, "will be extremely vigilant to the stability of the alliance and the group."