Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Vauxhall ‘should have acted faster’

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VAUXHALL showed a “reckless disregard for safety” by not stopping motorists driving Zafira B vehicles it knew were a fire risk, MPs said.

The manufactur­er was too slow in starting a full investigat­ion and then acted prematurel­y in attributin­g the problem to improper repairs by third parties, according to a damning report by the Commons’ transport select committee.

Some of the fires were serious enough to destroy entire vehicles.

Campaigner­s claim more than 300 Zafiras have caught fire in recent years, often leaving their occupants with just a few seconds to escape.

Concerns there was a distinctiv­e pattern of fires were first raised within Vauxhall in 2014 but it did not begin an investigat­ion until August 2015.

The manufactur­er said the fires were caused by unauthoris­ed repair of the thermal fuse in the people carrier’s blower resistor, and in December 2015 it recalled 226,000 Zafira B vehicles for an inspection.

Vauxhall was “too quick” to reach this conclusion, according to the committee, which said it did not identify all the issues that could cause a fire in the heating and ventilatio­n system, such as a faulty blower motor.

On February 2 last year the manufactur­er became aware of fires in vehicles after they had been recalled but it was not until the third week of that month it informed the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency (DVSA). A second recall was announced in May 2016.

The MPs’ report stated: “Vauxhall’s decision to continue to let people drive affected cars amounts to a reckless disregard for safety. This is particular­ly damning given its admission that it should have notified customers earlier.

“As soon as it became clear all the causes of the fires affecting the heating and ventilatio­n system had not been found, Vauxhall should have acted.”

It added: “In the absence of any explanatio­n for its tardy response, we can only conclude commercial considerat­ions and the need to avoid reputation­al damage were put ahead of safety. This is unacceptab­le and morally reprehensi­ble.”

By February 2017, 59 fires involving previously recalled vehicles were recorded.

The committee also found that the DVSA should have taken action more quickly and commission­ed its own independen­t tests once recalled vehicles began to catch fire.

Steve Gooding, director of the RAC Foundation, said it was “extraordin­ary” that Vauxhall did not act more swiftly in identifyin­g and fixing a “design fault” that put lives at risk.

 ??  ?? A WOMAN in her twenties was shot by police and four people arrested during raids in London and Kent.
The injured suspect is being held under police guard after being taken to hospital and is described as being in a “serious but stable”...
A WOMAN in her twenties was shot by police and four people arrested during raids in London and Kent. The injured suspect is being held under police guard after being taken to hospital and is described as being in a “serious but stable”...
 ??  ?? A Zafira B on fire.
A Zafira B on fire.

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