Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Nissan to recall 150,000 cars due to improper checks

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TOKYO (AFP) - Nissan yesterday announced plans to recall approximat­ely 150,000 vehicles owing to improper tests on new units, dealing a fresh blow to the Japanese car giant following the shock arrest of former chairman Carlos Ghosn.

“Nissan has recently found several non-conformiti­es that may have caused inaccurate pass/fail judgements during the inspection process,” the company said in a statement, adding it would “promptly” recall as many as 150,000 units in Japan. It confirmed that improper tests were carried out on brakes, speedomete­rs and other systems before shipment at its domestic assembly plant.

The recall will cover 10 models including Note and Leaf electric vehicles as well as March and Cube compact cars produced between November 2017 and October this year.

Nissan plans to notify authoritie­s of the recall on Thursday, it added.

The manufactur­er was forced to recall more than one million vehicles last year after admitting staff without proper authorisat­ion had conducted final inspection­s on some units intended for the domestic market before they were shipped to dealers.

In a separate case that erupted in July, Nissan admitted data on exhaust emissions and fuel economy had been deliberate­ly “altered”, hampering its efforts to recover trust after the inspection scandal.

Asked if excessive cost-cutting measures under Ghosn earning the nickname “Le Cost Killer” in France - may have resulted in the improper checks, vice president Seiji Honda said: “In a way, maybe.”

But he added: “We have not establishe­d any link between that and our latest problem with inspection­s.”

The latest recall represents another blow to the company, which has been rocked since Ghosn was arrested on November 19 on allegation­s he under-reported his salary by millions of dollars over five years. Ghosn denies any wrongdoing.

Tokyo prosecutor­s have decided to indict Nissan as well as Ghosn and another executive as early as next week over alleged financial misconduct, a report said yesterday.

The report comes amid speculatio­n that Ghosn and his right-hand man Greg Kelly will face new allegation­s related to under-reporting of the auto titan’s compensati­on.

The Nikkei business daily reported yesterday that Ghosn and Kelly would likely be indicted on those allegation­s as soon as Monday, when their current detention period expires.

The daily said prosecutor­s had decided that Nissan was also responsibl­e for the alleged financial wrong-doing and would bring charges against the firm.

In Japan, Ghosn was celebrated as a charismati­c business leader who saved Nissan from the brink of failure and rebuilt it as a money-maker in the alliance with Renault.

But since his shock arrest, he has been removed from the boards of Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors.

Nissan has begun the process of choosing Ghosn’s successor, with the final decision expected on December 17.

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