Lebanon Decides Not to Charge Ghosn over Israel Trip

Carlos Ghosn. (AFP)
Carlos Ghosn. (AFP)
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Lebanon Decides Not to Charge Ghosn over Israel Trip

Carlos Ghosn. (AFP)
Carlos Ghosn. (AFP)

Lebanon's prosecutor general decided Tuesday not to charge fugitive ex-auto tycoon Carlos Ghosn for visiting Israel in 2008 because a statute of limitations has expired, a judicial source said.

Three lawyers filed a motion in January calling for the 66-year-old businessman to be prosecuted over his trip to the Jewish state as Renault-Nissan chairman.

Lebanon is technically still at war with Israel and forbids its citizens from travelling there.

"Prosecutor general Ghassan Oueidat decided... not to prosecute Ghosn for the crimes attributed to him of entering the enemy country and dealing with it economically," the source told AFP.

"A statute of limitations of ten years had passed since the alleged crime," the source added.

Ghosn on January 8 apologized to the Lebanese people for having visited Israel to sign a deal to produce electric vehicles, saying he travelled on business for Renault on a French passport.

He also holds Lebanese and Brazilian nationalities.

The ex-Nissan chief was arrested in Japan in November 2018 on financial misconduct charges and spent 130 days in detention, before he jumped bail and smuggled himself out of the country late last year.

Ghosn appeared at a press conference in Lebanon on January 8, denying all charges and claiming he was a victim of a plot by Nissan and Japanese officials.

Japan has called on Ghosn to return to the Asian country to be tried, while Lebanon has asked Japan to hand over his file on financial misconduct charges.

He and his wife Carole are to take part in a documentary and mini-series about his life, the first of which started shooting in Beirut in September.



Israel Says It Needs Deal on Freeing Hostages to Extend Gaza Ceasefire

Palestinians shop at a market during the holy month of Ramadan in the city of Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, 04 March 2025. (EPA)
Palestinians shop at a market during the holy month of Ramadan in the city of Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, 04 March 2025. (EPA)
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Israel Says It Needs Deal on Freeing Hostages to Extend Gaza Ceasefire

Palestinians shop at a market during the holy month of Ramadan in the city of Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, 04 March 2025. (EPA)
Palestinians shop at a market during the holy month of Ramadan in the city of Khan Younis, southern Gaza Strip, 04 March 2025. (EPA)

Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said on Tuesday Israel was ready to proceed to the second phase of the Gaza ceasefire deal, as long as Hamas was ready to release more of the 59 hostages it is still holding.

Fighting in Gaza has been halted since January 19 under a truce arranged with US support and Qatari and Egyptian mediators, and Hamas has exchanged 33 Israeli hostages and five Thais for some 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees.

But the initial 42-day stage of the truce has expired and Hamas and Israel, which has blocked the entry of aid trucks into Gaza, remain far apart on broader issues including the postwar governance of Gaza and the future of Hamas itself.

"We are ready to continue to phase two," Saar told reporters in Jerusalem as Arab leaders prepared to meet in Cairo to discuss a plan for ending the war permanently.

"But in order to extend the time or the framework, we need an agreement to release more hostages."

Hamas says it wants to proceed to second-phase negotiations that could open the way to a permanent end to the war with the full withdrawal of Israeli forces from the devastated Palestinian enclave and a return of the remaining 59 hostages taken in the Hamas-led attack on Israel on October 7, 2023.

But Israel says more of its hostages must be handed over for the truce to be extended. It backs a plan it says was proposed by US President Donald Trump's special Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff to extend the ceasefire through the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, which began on Saturday, until after the Jewish Passover holiday in April.

Israeli government spokesperson Omer Dostri told Army Radio that Israel was allocating "a few days" for Hamas to agree to the Witkoff proposal. "If not, the cabinet will convene and decide on the next step."

Witkoff is due to visit the region in the next few days to discuss extending the ceasefire or moving ahead to phase two, the State Department said on Monday.

Saar denied Israel had breached the pact by not advancing to stage two talks. He said there was "no automaticity" between the stages and he said Hamas had itself violated the agreement to allow aid into Gaza by seizing most of the supplies itself.

Aid groups have said that looting and wrongful seizure of aid trucks into Gaza has been a major problem but Hamas, the group that seized power in Gaza in 2007, denies seizing aid for its own members.

Saar declined to comment on an Israeli media report that Israel had set a 10-day deadline to reach an agreement or resume fighting, but said: "If we want to do it, we will do it."