Lebanon has received an international wanted notice from Interpol for Nissan’s ex-chairman Carlos Ghosn, the country’s justice minister said.
The move comes four days after Ghosn fled from Japan to Lebanon before a trial on financial misconduct charges.
Albert Serhan told the Associated Press that the Red Notice for the former automotive titan was received earlier on Thursday by the prosecution.
Ghosn skipped bail before his much-anticipated trial, which was to start in April.
He arrived in Lebanon, his country of origin, on Monday via Turkey and has not been seen in public since.
Authorities have said that he entered legally on a French passport.
Interpol’s so-called Red Notices are requests to law enforcement agencies worldwide that they locate and provisionally arrest a wanted fugitive.
Mr Serhan said the Lebanese prosecution “will carry out its duties”, suggesting for the first time that Ghosn may be brought in for questioning.
But he said that Lebanon and Japan do not have an extradition treaty, ruling out the possibility that Beirut would hand Ghosn over to Japan.
Japanese prosecutors on Thursday raided Ghosn’s Tokyo home.
Japanese media showed investigators entering the home, which was Ghosn’s third residence in Tokyo since he was first arrested a year ago.
Authorities have now searched each one.
It was unclear how Ghosn avoided the tight surveillance he was under in Japan and showed up in Lebanon.
Ghosn said on Tuesday in a statement that he left for Lebanon because he thought the Japanese judicial system was unjust, and he wanted to avoid “political persecution”.
He said he would talk to reporters next week.
Lebanon said earlier that Ghosn entered the country legally, and there was no reason to take action against him.
Ghosn’s lawyers in Japan said they had no knowledge of the escape and they had all his passports.
He has French, Lebanese and Brazilian citizenship.
Japanese public broadcaster NHK TV, without identifying sources, reported on Thursday that Ghosn had two French passports.
Earlier, Japanese reports said there were no official records in Japan of Ghosn’s departure, but a private jet had left from a regional airport to Turkey.
The Turkish state-run Anadolu Agency said on Thursday that Turkish authorities had detained seven people as part of an investigation into how Ghosn fled to Lebanon via Istanbul.
The private DHA news agency reported that those detained are four pilots, a cargo company manager and two airport workers.
The Hurriyet newspaper said the plane carrying Ghosn landed at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport at 5.30am local time on December 29.
The paper reported Ghosn was not registered upon landing and was smuggled on board another plane that left for Lebanon.
Ghosn, who was charged in Japan with under-reporting his future compensation and breach of trust, has repeatedly asserted his innocence, saying authorities trumped up charges to prevent a possible fuller merger between Nissan Motor Co and alliance partner Renault SA.
The 1.5 billion yen (£10.4 million) bail that Ghosn posted on two separate instances to get out of detention is being revoked.