• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
British ex-serviceman and Dubai cargo group add to Ghosn puzzle

British ex-serviceman and Dubai cargo group add to Ghosn puzzle

January 6, 2020
Last Mile Delivery Market Worth Observing Growth | UPS, FedEx, SF Express

Last Mile Delivery Market Worth Observing Growth | UPS, FedEx, SF Express

April 23, 2024
Top 5 Spend Analysis Software ranked in 2024

Top 5 Spend Analysis Software ranked in 2024

March 1, 2024
How Tesla And BMW Are Leading A Supply Chain Renaissance With Blockchain

How Tesla And BMW Are Leading A Supply Chain Renaissance With Blockchain

January 19, 2024
LATAM Cargo strengthens European cargo links

LATAM Cargo strengthens European cargo links

April 14, 2020
Ford making reusable hospital gowns from airbag materials as efforts against coronavirus expand

Ford making reusable hospital gowns from airbag materials as efforts against coronavirus expand

April 14, 2020
Don’t Sweat NBC’s Decision to Cut Back on Television Ad Inventory

Don’t Sweat NBC’s Decision to Cut Back on Television Ad Inventory

April 14, 2020
Software firms sharpen focus on AI, big data as IT spending drops

Software firms sharpen focus on AI, big data as IT spending drops

April 14, 2020
Navigating turbulent times in your supply chain (TL:DR version)

Navigating turbulent times in your supply chain (TL:DR version)

April 14, 2020
Last Mile Delivery by Drones Market is Booming Worldwide

Last Mile Delivery by Drones Market is Booming Worldwide

April 14, 2020
AIR CARGO MARKET SIZE, SHARE, DEMAND, TREND, LATEST INNOVATIONS & APPLICATION ANALYSIS AND INDUSTRY GROWTH FORECAST 2027 – Science In Me

AIR CARGO MARKET SIZE, SHARE, DEMAND, TREND, LATEST INNOVATIONS & APPLICATION ANALYSIS AND INDUSTRY GROWTH FORECAST 2027 – Science In Me

April 14, 2020
Wheat procurement in Patiala: 6,500 coupons issued to farmers – cities

Wheat procurement in Patiala: 6,500 coupons issued to farmers – cities

April 14, 2020
Pandemic, Plastics And The Continuing Quest For Sustainability

Pandemic, Plastics And The Continuing Quest For Sustainability

April 14, 2020
  • Supply Chain
  • Logistics
  • Warehousing
  • Procurement
  • Shipping
  • More
    • Strategic Sourcing
    • Spend Analysis
    • Inventory
    • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
United States International Supply Chain Commission
United States International Supply Chain Commission
Home Shipping

British ex-serviceman and Dubai cargo group add to Ghosn puzzle

by usiscc
January 6, 2020
in Shipping
0
British ex-serviceman and Dubai cargo group add to Ghosn puzzle
492
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Carlos Ghosn’s escape from Japan has drawn in another ex-military figure after it emerged that a Dubai-based company made a payment to the private jet operator that whisked the former Nissan boss from Osaka to Istanbul.

The Financial Times has learnt that a $175,000 invoice for the jet was paid by Al-Nitaq al-Akhdhar for General Trade Limited.

The company is linked to Mike Douglas, a former British serviceman, who his peers say made a fortune in postwar Iraq by providing aviation and fuel services. The slogan of his main company is: “Successfully doing difficult jobs in difficult places.”

Mr Douglas’s experience as a contractor to the US military in Iraq is shared by Mike Taylor and George Zayek, the two private security contractors who accompanied Mr Ghosn on his journey out of Japan.

The apparent involvement of the Dubai company is another piece in the puzzle of Mr Ghosn’s audacious escape — which cost him an estimated $20m in expenses and forfeited bail money — and is believed to have involved him boarding a plane concealed in a large black audio equipment box.

The FT has acquired a newly surfaced photo of the box, apparently covered in the white powder used by police to extract fingerprints, which was left in a hangar in Istanbul’s Ataturk airport after Mr Ghosn switched to a second, smaller plane.

Any payment we’ve made was for other logistics, cargo business, but we didn’t charter any aircraft . . . So as far as I’m concerned we’re not involved

Mr Douglas said that his firms “have [cargo] business with MNG” — a reference to the Turkish conglomerate whose holdings include a cargo company as well as the private jet service that supplied two planes that carried Mr Ghosn to Beirut. But he denied involvement in the former auto executive’s escape.

“Any payment we’ve made was for other logistics, cargo business, but we didn’t charter any aircraft,” he said. “If anyone charters an aircraft you sign a charter agreement. And we haven’t chartered any aircraft so we’re not involved in it.”

The charter agreement was signed by someone using the first name “Ross” and an illegible surname. The space for the company’s name is left blank.

But the invoice, which included a reference to the tail code of the same private jet used in Mr Ghosn’s escape, was addressed to the Dubai-based Al-Nitaq al-Akhdhar, according to two people familiar with the matter.

Asked if he was denying all involvement in Mr Ghosn’s escape from Japan, Mr Douglas replied: “That’s correct.”

Al-Nitaq al-Akhdhar made an initial $175,000 payment to MNG Jet, the Turkish charter firm that supplied two planes used in the escape plan, on December 26 — two days before the plane departed from Dubai to Japan prior to the escape attempt. A further sum of $175,000 that is owed to MNG Jet has yet to be paid, according to two people familiar with the agreement.

Mr Douglas added: “We didn’t pay for it. We haven’t paid for any charter. So as far as I’m concerned we’re not involved.”

Pressed with the claim that Al-Nitaq al-Akhdhar made the payment for Mr Ghosn’s flight, Mr Douglas said that it appeared the firm had been “used and abused”.

MNG Jet blames a rogue employee for agreeing the escape contract with the businessman’s accomplices and last week filed a criminal complaint that led to his arrest by Turkish police.

Mr Douglas is the CEO and president of SKA International, a specialist aviation and logistics firm based in Dubai. He is one of many buccaneering entrepreneurs that have used the regional commercial hub of Dubai as a launch pad for business operations in troubled areas of the Middle East and Africa.

SKA’s operations in Iraq, according to its website, have included operating jetties and fuel-storage facilities in Khor al-Zubair port near Basra and air fuel services at the Kurdish airports of Erbil and Sulimaniyah. Oil company BP has been a business partner in Iraq.

SKA has since expanded into Uganda and Somalia, where it was the first foreign company to manage Mogadishu’s international airport and launched the war-ravaged country’s first Toyota dealership.

Recommended

“Mike is a very successful businessman, who survived and thrived with an aviation business but in reality was also making lots of money in fuel trading,” said a fellow expatriate business operator in Iraq. “He gets close to clients and solves problems for them.”

Japanese media attempted to provide another piece of the puzzle on Monday, reporting that Mr Ghosn travelled from central Tokyo to Osaka by bullet train.

The reports, carried by Nippon Television and TV Asahi, claimed that after walking out of his rented house the former Nissan chairman boarded the bullet train at about 4.30pm at Tokyo’s Shinagawa station, a vast railway hub about 6km from where he had been under house arrest since April 2019 on charges of financial misconduct.

If confirmed, Mr Ghosn’s use of Japan’s famous high-speed train would fill a big gap in the account of his escape. But it would raise new questions about how he was able to avoid attention riding on public transport.

Mr Ghosn reportedly left the bullet train at Shin-Osaka station more than two hours later, at which point he travelled to a hotel by taxi. He fled on December 29 — one of the busiest days of the year for rail, road and air travel as hundreds of thousands of Japanese criss-cross the country to visit family for the extended new year holidays.

Previous accounts of the escape, given to the Financial Times, suggested that he left Japan from the private jet terminal of Kansai International Airport near Osaka at just after 11pm on December 29 on a flight that took him to Istanbul.

Additional reporting by Leo Lewis and Kana Inagaki in Tokyo and Chloe Cornish in Beirut

Write to us if you have information that may help the reporters on this story: [email protected] and [email protected]

Ghosn escape box that we can use. It's covered in white dust which is apparently due to police fingerprinting work. I haven’t been able to establish exactly where it was taken - looks like it could be the Istanbul airport hangar but I’m not sure, so we’ll have to be vague about that. Previous reports have suggested that there were two boxes used in the escape
Share197Tweet123
usiscc

usiscc

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Escape From Tarkov – How to Rotate Items

Escape From Tarkov – How to Rotate Items

February 5, 2020
Supply chain examination: Planning for vulnerabilities you can’t control

Supply chain examination: Planning for vulnerabilities you can’t control

December 7, 2019
Procurement Project Manager job with Camden London Borough Council

Procurement Project Manager job with Camden London Borough Council

February 17, 2020
Art Battle Wichita Falls III at The Warehouse, 1401 Lamar.

Art Battle Wichita Falls III at The Warehouse, 1401 Lamar.

0
Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends, and Forecasts 2016–2024 – ZMR News Reports

Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends, and Forecasts 2016–2024 – ZMR News Reports

0
PHOTOS: Ottawa firefighters respond to warehouse fire

PHOTOS: Ottawa firefighters respond to warehouse fire

0
Last Mile Delivery Market Worth Observing Growth | UPS, FedEx, SF Express

Last Mile Delivery Market Worth Observing Growth | UPS, FedEx, SF Express

April 23, 2024
Top 5 Spend Analysis Software ranked in 2024

Top 5 Spend Analysis Software ranked in 2024

March 1, 2024
How Tesla And BMW Are Leading A Supply Chain Renaissance With Blockchain

How Tesla And BMW Are Leading A Supply Chain Renaissance With Blockchain

January 19, 2024
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2024 United States International Supply Chain Commission (usiscc.org)

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Cookie settingsACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled

Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.

Non-necessary

Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.

SAVE & ACCEPT
No Result
View All Result
  • Supply Chain
  • Logistics
  • Warehousing
  • Procurement
  • Shipping
  • More
    • Strategic Sourcing
    • Spend Analysis
    • Inventory
    • Contact Us

Copyright © 2024 United States International Supply Chain Commission (usiscc.org)