Ex-Nissan Chairman Carlos Ghosn arrived in Beirut on a private jet from Turkey, Lebanese media outlets reported early Monday. A family friend confirmed to the Associated Press that Ghosn arrived in his home country, but offered no further details about his whereabouts.
Ghosn released a statement from Beirut criticizing the Japanese justice system, adding that he plans to further speak to media outlets starting next week. The auto tycoon had been under strict bail conditions in Japan, which included the surrender of his passport and the installation of surveillance cameras outside of his residence, Reuters reported.
“I am now in Lebanon and will no longer be held hostage by a rigged Japanese justice system where guilt is presumed, discrimination is rampant, and basic human rights are denied,” Ghosn said in a statement released by his public relations firm. “I have not fled justice – I have escaped injustice and political persecution.”
Ghosn, who holds French and Lebanese passports, was awaiting trial over financial misconduct allegations in Japan. He was facing charges of hiding income and under-reporting his compensation as Nissan’s chairman.
Ghosn’s attorneys have insisted that the charges are part of a conspiracy to oust Ghosn and prevent a fuller merger with Nissan’s alliance partner Renault SA.
The Associated Press reported Monday that a house known to belong to Ghosn in Beirut “had security guards outside with two lights on.” The report added, “The guards denied he was inside, although one said he was in Lebanon without saying how he knew that.”
There was no immediate comment from officials in Japan or Lebanon.
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President Donald Trump’s daughter Tiffany Trump is dating Lebanese billionaire Michael Boulos, according to the pop culture magazine Page Six.
Trump, 25, met Boulos during a vacation to Mykonos, Greece this summer. Boulos grew up in Nigeria, where his family owns a multibillion-dollar company that trades in vehicles, equipment, retail and construction.
Sources told Page Six that Tiffany Trump brought Boulos to Trump’s Mar-a-Lago for Thanksgiving.
“Tiffany is happy she has so far been able to keep things with Michael under the radar,” the source said. “But she introduced him to her family at Thanksgiving, and he comes across as a very intelligent young man from a great family.”
Boulos is the son of Massad Boulos, who owns the conglomerate SCOA Nigeria PLC. The company has its hand in almost every major industry in Nigeria, including automobile, construction, agriculture, food and drink and infrastructure, according to its stock profile.
Nigeria is home to a modest population of Lebanese expats, many of whom have business interests in the African nation.
Page Six reported that Boulos was born in Lagos, and attended an elite international school in the nation’s largest city. His brother Fares is an actor and rapper who performs by the stage name Farastafari.
According to the Arab News, the Boulos family is from the northern Lebanese village of Kfaraakka, in the Koura District of Lebanon. The politically-connected family often travels back to Lebanon to visit.
It is not clear how long Tiffany Trump and Michael Boulos have been dating. She recently broke up with her long-time boyfriend Ross Mechanic.
The busy Tiffany is a law student at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. She graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, where she majored in sociology and urban studies.
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Carlos Ghosn, the towering Lebanese-Brazilian CEO of Nissan, has been fired and arrested amid an investigation into alleged income misconduct.
An internal probe found that Ghosn allegedly underreported his salary and used company assets for personal gain, according to multiple media reports.
Ghosn, 64, is credited as a major figure and turnaround master in the global automobile industry. Ghosn has yet to respond publicly to these allegations.
Japanese prosecutors said Ghosn, 64 and a second Nissan board member, Greg Kelly, were taken into custody on suspicion of violating financial laws by filing false statements.
The two men allegedly collaborated to under-report Ghosn’s income by about 5 billion yen, or $44 million, over a five-year period ending in March 2015.
The maximum punishment for filing a false financial statement is up to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to 10 million yen, or $89,000, reported CNN Business.
“Nissan deeply apologizes for causing great concern to our shareholders and stakeholders,” the company statement said. “We will continue our work to identify our governance and compliance issues, and to take appropriate measures.”
The auto executive is known globally for his turnaround efforts at Renault and Nissan, where he helped steer the companies out of financial crisis.
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Exploration drilling of oil and gas in the Mediterranean Sea will begin in 2019, Lebanese Minister of Energy and Water Cesar Abi Khalil said in an interview with the Russian news agency Sputnik.
The minister also held a news conference in Dec. 2017 announcing plans to begin exploratory drilling in 2019.
“If commercial drilling does not take place as we plan, we will continue the exploration of the oil fields,” Abi Khalil told the news outlet.
If the country begins successfully drilling for gas and oil, the Energy Minister said it could be used to fulfill Lebanon’s energy needs, or be delivered to Europe “by sea, through Egypt or via the Arab pipeline.”
Hydrocarbons, an early indicator if oil exists in an area, were originally discovered near Lebanon in the eastern Mediterranean in 2009.
In August of this year, Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil asked his Russian counterpart to encourage Russian energy companies to take part in the upcoming bidding round of foreign investments.
Sputnik reported that tensions have grown between Lebanese and Israeli governments over territorial claims of the oil reserves.
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On TV, Kevin O’Leary is a staunchly money-driven businessman known for his big investments and blunt off-the-cuff remarks. But when the cameras are off, the multimillionaire is a proud family man who has passed down his Lebanese values to his children.
O’Leary is best known for his role in the ABC television series Shark Tank, where he is one of five ‘shark’ investors who listen to entrepreneur pitches and choose whether or not to invest in their startups. He is also the co-founder of the billion-dollar tech company SoftKey Software Products.
The Canadian-born businessman was raised by an Irish salesman father and Lebanese businesswoman mother. He spoke candidly to Lebanese Examiner about his rapid success in the world of business, and how his Lebanese values still carry on to this day.
“Lebanese culture is one of the most successful entrepreneurial cultures on earth,” O’Leary says. “I’m very proud to say that because it’s true.”
All In the Family Business
Growing up, O’Leary was surrounded by business and hard work. His grandfather immigrated to Montreal, Canada from Hasbaya, Lebanon and built a successful clothing manufacturing company called Kiddie Togs.
“That’s how I learned family values, and I think those things are very important,” O’Leary says. “You don’t realize that until you get older. The work ethic in Lebanese families is legendary.”
O’Leary’s mother, aunts and uncle all worked hard to keep the family business running, but they always made time for family. His mother Georgette Bookalam died in 2008, and her sons credit their successes to her teachings.
“My mother Georgette was one of the most influential people in my career,” O’Leary says. “To this day, her wisdom and advice guide me in almost every business choice I make.”
The O’Leary home valued family. Sunday dinners were an important part of his life growing up, and it started a special tradition that continues today.
“I remember every Sunday if you didn’t show up for dinner that (my grandmother) prepared all day long, you would burn down in perpetuity,” he says. “I appreciate that because I have those same rules now. I try to get my family together no matter where we are every Sunday to keep that tradition going.”
Lebanese DNA
O’Leary once lived in Cyprus, and would visit Beirut often in the sixties before troubles broke out in the region. His experience in global investments have taken him around the world – and he always finds a Lebanese friend with an incredible business story.
“Lebanese are very smart investors,” he says. “If you go to any city in the world, you’re going to find that the core Lebanese community is very successful. Very often, they own all the real estate in town and lots of different businesses.”
Through his travels, he always finds a good Lebanese meal, too.
“It’s no surprise to me when I go to South America, Cambodia, Europe, wherever, I always go for a good meal,” he says. “I look for a good Lebanese restaurant.”
The entrepreneurial spirit flows through the Lebanese blood, he adds. Today, when he lectures at universities all over North America, he shares these stories with American and Canadian students.
“Some of us are born to create wealth, and others are meant to work there,” O’Leary says. “That’s just the way it is. They are both noble pursuits, but Lebanese have built businesses, they take risks and they support their families – they have a cultural disposition to do that.”
O’Leary believes his grandmother and mother played a central role in his career. He calls them “powerful matriarchs,” and says they exist in every Lebanese family.
“I’m a big supporter of women entrepreneurs – women are very good at business,” he adds. “I think the Lebanese culture was one of the first to support the concept of matriarchal values.”
These values, he says, are part of his career decisions, every day.
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Casino du Liban president Roland Khoury projected the net profits for the establishment to be over $10 million for the fiscal year of 2018.
In 2017, the casino rebounded after Khoury took over with a $3 million profit after years of experiencing losses, the Daily Star reports.
The casino is majority owned by the government through the Intra Investment Company and is managed by London Clubs International, a subsidiary of Caesars Entertainment Corporation.
As a result, the establishment pays lots of taxes on most of their games inside. Khoury said “We pay nearly $40 million in taxes on the slot machines.”
He called on tax reform in the country so that the casino will be able to better compete with casinos in Cyprus and around the world.
Despite his grievances, many analysts have noted that the expected revenue for 2018 is promising given the small size of Lebanon’s population and where a significant percentage of people do not gamble.
Lebanese-American businesswoman and philanthropist Adele Barakat died April 29 at her Pennsylvania home, an obituary said. She was 95.
Barakat was born to Lebanese immigrant parents in 1923, and owned the beloved Hykel’s Subs restaurant in Ardmore, Pennsylvania.
She established the restaurant in 1938 after graduating from business school. She also worked for the Signal Corps during World War II, where she helped provide support for command and control of the armed forces.
Barakat and her husband opened several businesses, and employed more than 250 people in the Delaware Valley, her obituary said. Her husband also owned a manufacturing facility in Oxford, Pennsylvania.
As a Lebanese-American, Barakat was one of many families approached by former actor Danny Thomas to fundraise for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.
She was also a major support of the Lebanese Maronite Catholic community in the Philadelphia suburbs, where she donated a 14-acre property to establish St. Sharbel Church in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania.
Barakat and her husband were recognized by Pope John Paul III with the highest honors of the Catholic Church to thank them for their contributions.
Her funeral was held on Saturday.
Barakat loved gardening, spending time with her family and cooking traditional Lebanese food, her obituary said.
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The average starting cost for apartments under construction in Beirut vary from $2,000 to $8,500 per square meter, according to a new study conducted by a Beirut-based real estate advisory firm.
The firm RAMCO studied apartment asking prices in 67 Beirut neighborhoods, including popular downtown districts such as Saifi Village and Manara.
According to the study, between 2016 and 2017, prices have dropped in 34 out of the 67 Beirut neighborhoods, especially in central neighborhoods between Bachoura and Kaskas.
But researchers say there has not been a significant drop in apartment prices in the highest tier of the market. The most expensive neighborhoods, Manara and Saifi Village, have the same asking price as last year.
SEE MAP OF BEIRUT’S MOST EXPENSIVE NEIGHBORHOODS:
Other neighborhoods, classified by the study as “mid-market” areas, have seen their average prices increase. Areas such as Sioufi, Beddawi and Sakiet el Janzir, along with 23 other neighborhoods, posted a price hike over the last year.
Price hikes, the study says, are due to the introduction of new residential projects, which pull prices upward.
PRICES DROPPED
Central neighborhoods between Bachoura and Kaskas
Most neighborhoods on the eastern edge of Achrafieh
PRICES INCREASED
Mid-market neighborhoods
Sioufi, Beddawi and Sakiet el Janzir
PRICES REMAIN THE SAME
Neighborhoods in good demand
Sursock, Saifi Village, Monnot, Kobayat, Kantari, Manara
Researchers say the study looked specifically at asking prices posted by developers, and excluded any margin of negotiation or potential discounts offered during the purchasing process.
According to its website, RAMCO is a Beirut-based full line real estate advisory company, providing agency, marketing, and consultancy services.
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Brazil’s Lebanese president Michel Temer is facing calls for impeachment after allegations of corruption and cover-up were exposed by a Brazilian newspaper.
Temer is accused of offering hush-money to jailed associate in exchange of his silence in the country’s biggest-ever graft probe.
Brazilian “O Globo” newspaper said it obtained recordings which showed Temer discussing payments to silence the jailed former Speaker Eduardo Cunha.
Cunha was sentenced to a 15-year prison term in March for corruption, money laundering and tax evasion, as part of an investigation into corruption at Brazilian oil giant Petrobras.
Cunha led the impeachment process against former President Dilma Rousseff, who Temer replaced in August 2016.
According to the “O Globo” article, Temer is heard on audio tapes discussing hush-payments with Chairman Joesley Batista of meat giant JBS SA. Temer’s office acknowledged the meeting with the businessman, but denied any part in alleged efforts to offer a payment.
“That clandestine recording was manipulated and doctored with bad intentions,” Temer said at a news conference on Saturday. “I will not resign.”
Temer said he had filed a petition with Brazil’s supreme federal tribunal to suspend the corruption investigation until audio experts can analyze the recordings.
WATCH:
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