Essayer OR - Gratuit
Five Years After He Escaped in a Crate, Fugitive Carlos Ghosn Is Teaching Business Strategy
Mint Mumbai
|April 29, 2025
It's been five years since Carlos Ghosn escaped from Japan to Lebanon, accused of siphoning off millions of dollars from the car companies he ran, Nissan and Renault.

He wakes up every morning at 5:30 a.m. His wife, Carole, wakes up later, and the two walk the beach with their golden retriever, Melqart—named for a Phoenician god who symbolized life and death—or exercise with a personal trainer in the $20 million pink mansion that Nissan claims is owned by the company.
Other days, Ghosn takes out his 120-foot yacht, which Nissan also claims, though he never leaves Lebanese waters.
With Lebanese, French, and Brazilian passports, Ghosn once described himself as a citizen of the globe. But after fleeing from Japan by hiding in an audio-equipment box on a private jet, he remains an international fugitive and is stuck in Lebanon, hemmed in by arrest warrants issued by French and Japanese prosecutors.
We met recently at a Lebanese university where Ghosn runs an executive-leadership program, and his aides handed out paper cups of espresso with the phrase, "Coffee increases happiness," while his bodyguards kept watch outside.
A university colleague had stressed the need to arrive 30 minutes early, as Ghosn is always punctual. Ever the corporate executive, he wore a blue suit, with a shirt and a sweater, his hair graying gracefully for a 71-year-old.
"The ladies are taking care of you?" Ghosn asked as we sat down, still accustomed to the personal-assistant trappings of an international CEO.
No longer running a car empire, Ghosn explained that he has more time to read, and was currently halfway through the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel "Trust," about a Wall Street titan who attempts to recast what he perceives to be a false narrative about his life. He's also an investor in a winery that produces red and white blends, with vineyards dotted across the mountains of Lebanon.
Ghosn has worked, without a salary, for almost five years on the executive leadership programs for entrepreneurs at the Holy Spirit University of Kaslik, which is about 30 minutes north of the Lebanese capital, Beirut.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition April 29, 2025 de Mint Mumbai.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Mint Mumbai

Mint Mumbai
Sun Pharma rejig sets stage for Shanghvi's succession
Dilip Shanghvi is now executive chairman, son Aalok to oversee critical US business
2 mins
September 20, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Apple on track for record quarter on iPhone 17 sales
Sales volume, value expected to rise; top models sold out at three Apple Stores
3 mins
September 20, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Vodafone Idea investors cheer on hope of solution to new AGR case
Vodafone Idea Ltd investors celebrated after the Centre sought time to resolve the latest dispute over its statutory dues, citing consumer interest and its own stakeholding in the beleaguered telco.
2 mins
September 20, 2025

Mint Mumbai
The many shades of tea
My 13-year-old has taken to sharing Reels on the absurdities of language and how it can confuse one terribly if you're a new learner trying to grasp the rules.
2 mins
September 20, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Thyssenkrupp bid a litmus test for Jindal scion
Jindal Steel International’s pursuit of Thyssenkrupp Steel Europe marks a crucial moment for the group, and for its next-generation leader-in-waiting, Venkatesh Jindal.
3 mins
September 20, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Nvidia’s Huang walks an AI tightrope between US, China
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is trying to keep both the U.S. and China happy. It is proving to be a tricky high-wire act.
4 mins
September 20, 2025

Mint Mumbai
A tough test stands in the way of India’s ₹10 lakh-plus funds
Mutual funds are rolling out specialized investment funds (SIFs) with a minimum ₹10 lakh ticket size, but the product faces a distribution hurdle.
3 mins
September 20, 2025

Mint Mumbai
Life's little tragedies, comedies and ironies
Hindi journalist Anil Yadav's short fiction in translation throws light on corruption, hypocrisy and everyday absurdities in Varanasi, and beyond
4 mins
September 20, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Food safety watchdog sniffs for spice adulteration
India's food safety regulator has ordered an enforcement blitz on spice manufacturers across the country, in a move to combat adulteration and safeguard public health.
1 mins
September 20, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Flex those flaxseeds for an extra dose of nutrition
This seed ties together fabric, food and fine art.
4 mins
September 20, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size