Ousted Renault CEO Bollore raised concerns of governance
problems at Nissan: report
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[December 16, 2019]
PARIS (Reuters) - Renault's former chief executive Thierry Bollore, who
was ousted in October, had sought to flag alleged conflicts of interest
and governance problems at the company's Japanese alliance partner
Nissan before his departure, Le Monde reported on Monday.
Citing a letter from Oct. 7 addressed to Nissan's <7201.T> board, of
which he was member, France's Le Monde newspaper said Bollore had raised
questions over the firm's internal investigation surrounding former
alliance boss Carlos Ghosn.
Nissan and Renault were left reeling by Ghosn's arrest in Tokyo a year
ago, on financial misconduct charges which he denies. They have since
tried to reboot their strained partnership by revamping their management
teams, including by purging them of Ghosn allies and removing people in
top jobs at the time of the scandal.
Bollore - who took a step up at the French carmaker when Ghosn left even
though he was known for his close ties to the alliance founder - was
eventually pushed out as Renault's CEO on Oct. 11, days after penning
his letter.
In comments sent to Reuters, Nissan spokeswoman Azusa Momose denied
there were any irregularities in its internal investigation of Ghosn's
affairs, and added that the company had reviewed its processes once
again following Bollore's letter.
"Nissan's independent directors confirmed that the investigation was
properly conducted and could be relied on," Momose said.
Nissan directors had discussed all the allegations raised by Bollore and
the company "concluded that Bollore's concerns were not founded and were
based for the most part on inaccurate information and speculation," she
added.
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Thierry Bollore,
Chief Executive Officer of Renault, reacts after French carmaker
Renault's 2018 annual results presentation at their headquarters in
Boulogne-Billancourt, near Paris, France, February 14, 2019.
REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo
Bollore said in the letter that he was particularly concerned by the revelation
that Nissan had a list of 80 managers implicated in financial dealings similar
to the ones attributed to Ghosn.
He also raised issues with the chain of command at Nissan, saying some key board
members were sometimes kept in the dark on internal matters.
Renault <RENA.PA>, which is still searching for a permanent replacement for
Bollore as CEO, had no immediate comment.
As well as changing its CEO, Nissan recently demoted senior vice president Hari
Nada - a key whistleblower against Ghosn and whose role was also questioned in
Bollore's letter - although its internal investigation had found no evidence
against the executive.
(Reporting by Sarah White in Paris and Kevin Buckland in Tokyo; Editing by
Kirsten Donovan)
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