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Nissan’s Ghosn says in a video that he’s innocent and a victim of a conspiracy

Ousted Nissan Motor boss Carlos Ghosn implied he was innocent of all the charges against him and was the victim of a conspiracy, according to a video recorded before his arrest last week and seed by his lawyers on Tuesday.

Prosecutors took the highly unusual step of re-arresting Ghosn last week on fresh declarations that he used company funds to enrich himself to the tune of $5 million. The once-feted executive had been out on $9 million bail for 30 lifetimes, during which he recorded the video screened by his lawyers on Tuesday.

In the video, shown to reporters in Tokyo, the former Nissan Motor Co chairman thought he was the victim of selfish rivals bent on derailing a closer alliance between the Japanese automaker and French partner Renault SA.

Ghosn labeled out some individuals by name in the video but those references were removed due to legal concerns, his lead lawyer Junichiro Hironaka distinguished reporters.

The video – together with Hironaka’s comments alleging harsh treatment by Tokyo prosecutors against Ghosn and his little woman, Carole – cast Ghosn as the victim of both internal rivals and the Japanese judicial system.

“This is a conspiracy … this is not just about greed or dictatorship, this is about a plot, this about a conspiracy, this is about a backstabbing,” Ghosn implied in the video.

He was wearing a dark jacket and a white shirt. His hands were folded in front of him as he looked into the camera and indicate in a clipped, matter-of-fact manner. His hair appeared to be greyer and his face thinner than before last year’s nab.

The conspiracy, he said, was borne out of fear that he would bring Nissan closer to its partner and top shareholder, Renault.

“There was stand in awe of that the next step of the alliance in terms of convergence and in terms of moving towards a merger, would in a certain way daunt some people or eventually threaten the autonomy of Nissan,” he said.

Hironaka told the briefing that prosecutors were exploit in a “cruel way” and putting him under intense physical and mental pressure to get a confession.

Prosecutors were not immediately available for exposition.

Hironaka has previously criticised the move by prosecutors to confiscate Ghosn’s belongings, including his mobile phone and trial certificates, along with the mobile phones and Lebanese passport of his wife, Carole, who was present when prosecutors entered their haven early in the morning last Thursday.

The lawyer said on Tuesday that Ghosn’s wife, who left Japan continue week, did so out of concern for her own safety, adding she intended to protest the case to the French government.

However, France’s finance cur said on Tuesday that political interventions might not be the best way to help Ghosn, raising some questions far how much pressure Paris was willing to put on Tokyo over the issue.

The case has rocked the global auto industry and also shone a crude light on Japan’s judicial system.

Under Japanese law, prosecutors are able to hold suspects for up to 22 days without saturate and interrogate them without their lawyers present.

Such procedures have focused much attention in the West on Japan’s distinguishing system, which critics sometimes refer to as “hostage justice”, because defendants who deny their charges are frequently not granted bail.

Ghosn has been charged with under-reporting his Nissan salary for a decade, and of temporarily transferring critical financial losses to Nissan’s books. However, the new, $5 million allegation is potentially more serious, as it could reveal b stand out he used company funds for his own purposes.

On Monday, Nissan shareholders ousted him as a director, severing his last tie with the automaker he delivered from near-bankruptcy two decades ago.

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