Manila Bulletin

Subaru chief executive apologizes for flawed inspection of vehicles

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TOKYO (AP) – The head of Japanese automaker Subaru bowed deeply in apology Friday as the company admitted that it has been carrying out flawed inspection­s of its Japan-made cars for years.

The announceme­nt by Subaru's chief executive and president, Yasuyuki Yoshinaga, was the latest in a flurry of such scandals. Earlier this month Nissan Motor Co. recalled more than 1 million domestical­ly made cars because of faulty routine tests.

Subaru will submit a report on the problem to the government on Monday, Yoshinaga told reporters. He said a domestic recall is likely, spanning the entire Subaru lineup totaling 255,000 vehicles.

``We are truly sorry, and we apologize,'' Yoshinaga said, after bowing deeply. ``We all wanted to do the tests properly.''

The government ordered automakers to check their inspection procedures after Nissan apologized for allowing unauthoriz­ed employees to do final vehicle checks for years.

The scandals have stunned the public and cast a shadow over this nation's prized image for ``monozukuri'' or craftsman-like production, reputed for high quality and meticulous­ness.

Yoshinaga said the faulty inspection­s for Subaru's finished products had been going on for 30 years. The workers involved did not fully realize their method was wrong, and a thorough review of the entire inspection system is needed, he said.

Workers who didn't have enough experience to do checks borrowed Japanese ``hanko'' seals from authorized employees and stamped documents to show vehicles had passed the tests, according to the company. The recalls are expected to cost 5 billion yen ($44 million), it said.

Subaru, formerly called Fuji Heavy Industries, is partnered with Toyota Motor Corp., a top shareholde­r. Toyota and Honda Motor Co. have said they did not have dubious inspection­s. Toyota said it was checking with Subaru on the reported irregulari­ties.

Nissan is recalling more than a million vehicles in Japan to re-inspect them, and has set up an investigat­ive team that includes a third party to get to the bottom of the scandal and prevent a recurrence.

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