France issues international arrest warrant for former Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn

Former Nissan Chairman Carlos Ghosn during an online press conference on Dec. 6, 2021. The disgraced car executive jumped bail in Japan in a sensational getaway in 2018. (AFP)
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Updated 22 April 2022
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France issues international arrest warrant for former Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn

  • Disgraced auto tycoon who jumped bail in Japan in a sensational getaway in 2018

NANTERRE, France: France has issued an international arrest warrant for Carlos Ghosn, the disgraced auto tycoon who jumped bail in Japan and fled to Lebanon in a sensational getaway, prosecutors said on Friday.

The warrant was issued over $16.3 million (€15 million) in suspect payments between the Renault-Nissan alliance that Ghosn once headed and an Omani company, Suhail Bahwan Automobiles, said prosecutors in the Paris suburb of Nanterre.

Ghosn, then chief of Nissan chief and head of an alliance between Renault, Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors, was detained in Japan in November 2018 on suspicion of financial misconduct along with his top aide, Greg Kelly. They both denied wrongdoing.

In December 2019 as he awaited trial, Ghosn staged an audacious getaway, being smuggled out of Japan in an audio-equipment case on a private jet.

Ghosn, who holds French, Lebanese and Brazilian passports, landed in Beirut, which has no extradition treaty with Japan.

He said he fled because he did not believe he would get a fair trial in Japan, where prosecutors have a nearly 99 percent conviction rate in cases that go to trial.

He also said that Nissan colluded with prosecutors to have him arrested because he wanted to deepen the Japanese firm’s alliance with Renault.


French-Israeli activists hit out at ‘complicity in genocide’ case

Rachel Touitou (L) and Nili Kupfer-Naouri during a press conference in Netanya on February 8, 2026. (AFP)
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French-Israeli activists hit out at ‘complicity in genocide’ case

  • Israel’s retaliation flattened much of Gaza and left more than 71,800 people dead, according to the health ministry, whose figures are considered reliable by the United Nations

NETANUA, Israel: Two French-Israeli activists facing legal summons in France for “complicity in genocide” denounced on Sunday what they described as a political trial.
The summons were issued in July last year for lawyer Nili Kupfer-Naouri of the Israel is Forever group and Rachel Touitou of the Tsav 9 group over protests in 2024 and 2025 in which trucks carrying humanitarian aid for Gaza were blocked at checkpoints.
The summons call for the two to appear before an investigating magistrate but not for their detention.
Speaking at an event in Netanya in central Israel, Kupfer-Naouri asserted that “this is not an individual case, this is a state matter... this is a political trial.”
Touitou told AFP that she had “protested peacefully, my only ‘weapon’ was an Israeli flag,” adding she had been motivated by accusations of Hamas looting aid while hostages were “rotting” in militants’ hands.
“International law cannot be hijacked and instrumentalized for political ends,” she added.
Kupfer-Naouri, who has filed a slander complaint in France against organizations involved in the case, said: “You cannot be accused of complicity in genocide when no court, either French or international, has ruled that there is a genocide in Gaza.”
The Gaza war was sparked by Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,221 people, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.
Israel’s retaliation flattened much of Gaza and left more than 71,800 people dead, according to the health ministry, whose figures are considered reliable by the United Nations.
A ceasefire has been in place since October 10, though both sides have repeatedly accused each other of violations.