Paris informs Tokyo it wants Renault and Nissan to integrate[*]
A French government delegation has informed Tokyo that it would seek an integration of Renault and Nissan, most likely under the umbrella of a single holding company, the Nikkei reported on Sunday.
The delegation, which included French government-designated Renault director Martin Vial, also said that it wanted to name Nissan's next chairman, according to the report. Nissan was not immediately available for comment.
Nissan ex-chairman Carlos Ghosn, arrested and detained in Tokyo since Nov. 19, has been indicted in Japan on charges of under-reporting his salary for eight years through March 2018, and temporarily transferring personal investment losses to Nissan during the global financial crisis. Ghosn has denied all charges.
[*] Noscript caused issues for me; same story can be found at U.S. News & World Report.
Previously: Nissan Motor Chairman and Others Set to be Indicted
(Score: 1) by khallow on Monday January 21 2019, @02:19PM (2 children)
Who was detained to force "regime change"? Carlos Ghosn most likely committed fraud and embezzlement as claimed - Japan doesn't do such things for show. And as to the potential return of Nissan to the Japanese system, having a corrupt leader for the Renault–Nissan–Mitsubishi alliance is a great way to fuel that move.
But sure, I could see that official interest in Ghosn's potential illegal activities might be fueled by intelligence that Nissan was being prepped for sale to China (a battery division [china-certification.com] had already been sold to a Chinese company in August of last year). But that would mean that they still need criminal dirt in order to force the Japanese system takeover. Ghosn most likely provided that opportunity.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 22 2019, @12:06AM (1 child)
If Ghosn has likely committed crimes as you seem to believe, the French government is sure taking its time replacing him as head of Renault. In a time when governments are eager to share evidence about corrupt activities.
(Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday January 22 2019, @12:44AM
France? I doubt they're all that eager, especially for a company they own part of.