The former car magnate spent much of his two-hour press conference insisting that justice was impossible for him in Japan.
Ghosn, who denies any wrongdoing, fled charges of financial misconduct including allegedly under-reporting his compensation to the tune of $85 million
Nissan has insisted Ghosn should be held accountable for his "various acts of misconduct"
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Prosecutors said they had obtained the warrant on suspicion she made false statements during April testimony to the Tokyo district court about meetings with an unnamed individual
Ghosn fled Japan on December 29 for Lebanon, in an elaborate and apparently carefully planned escape
Ghosn then flew flew via Istanbul to Beirut, the capital of Lebanon, which doesn't have an extradition agreement with Japan
The details of his escape remain spotty, with Japan saying it is still investigating how he slipped past strict security measures imposed as part of his bail conditions
Separately, prosecutors issued a statement defending Japan's justice system, saying his departure ignored the legal system and amounted to a crime.
Carlos Ghosn's bail has already been cancelled and that an Interpol "red notice" had been issued, says Japan in first comment after fallen auto titan's escape.
The fallen auto titan held early discussions with a movie producer before his audacious escape. The film's villain: Japanese justice
Referring to Japan's judicial system, he said: I was betrayed, but the one who betrayed me is not Carlos Ghosn
The defiant and stunning escape of such a high-profile suspect while awaiting trial on financial misconduct allegations has raised serious questions about the surveillance methods of the Japanese bail
Japanese media reported on Friday that surveillance footage shows Ghosn left the house alone on the day of his disappearance but didn't return
Japanese investigators are probing how the man who was once the country's best paid corporate executive managed to slip out of house arrest and dodge trial, causing a national embarrassment
It said one employee had admitted to falsifying the records to keep Ghosn's name off the flight manifest, and that he acted "in his individual capacity"
Highly educated and successful in her own right, in the 2000s Carole Ghosn founded a company selling luxury kaftans
Carlos Ghosn claimed on Thursday he organised his dramatic escape from bail in Japan alone as the disgraced auto tycoon enjoyed his first days of freedom in Beirut despite an Interpol arrest notice. The exact circumstances of the former Renault-Nissan boss's escape from a case he said was "rigged" were unclear but media reports described a plot that had all the trappings of a spy novel. Ghosn denied through the Paris-based agency handling his PR that his family had anything to do with his escape. "The media reports saying my wife Carole and other family members played a role in my departure from Japan are falsehoods. I alone organised my departure," he said. Turkey said seven people had been detained for questioning, including four pilots, over how the wanted tycoon was able to transit through Istanbul. Ghosn, who had been under house arrest in Tokyo since April, was believed to be holed up his central Beirut residence, where visitors filed in and out under the scrutiny of TV ...
"I alone organised my departure," Ghosn said in a statement issued through French public relations firm Image7.