Japan's justice minister vowed Monday to strengthen border checks and review bail conditions after Nissan's former chairman, Carlos Ghosn, fled the country despite supposedly stringent surveillance.
Masako Mori told reporters at a news conference that the ministry has already acted to prevent a recurrence but declined to give details.
Ghosn skipped bail and showed up in
Lebanon a week ago, saying he could not get a fair hearing in
Japan, where he was awaiting trial on financial misconduct allegations.