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Japanese authorities inspect Toyota HQ over certification irregularities

Japanese authorities inspect Toyota HQ over certification irregularities
Toyota Motor Corporation Chairman Akio Toyoda attends a press conference over rigging safety tests by its affiliate Daihatsu that affected 88,000 vehicles, in Bangkok, Thailand, May 8, 2023.
PHOTO: Reuters file

TOKYO — Officials from Japan's transport ministry launched an on-site investigation at Toyota Motor's headquarters on Tuesday (June 4) after irregularities were found in its applications to certify certain models.

The widening fallout over vehicle certification tests stem from a safety test scandal at Toyota's Daihatsu compact car unit and has spread to other Japanese automakers.

But Toyota, which has long prided itself on its reputation for safety and reliability, was the only automaker to undergo an on-site inspection.

Japan's transport ministry had announced plans to carry out the inspection a day earlier, when it said Toyota, Mazda, Honda, Suzuki and Yamaha Motor were found to have submitted either flawed or manipulated data when applying for certification of vehicles.

Toyota chairman Akio Toyoda, the grandson of the automaker's founder, apologised to shareholders, car fans and other stakeholders at a press conference on Monday."

From a compliance standpoint, we think further strengthening of governance will be needed going forward," analysts at Goldman Sachs wrote in a note to clients.

Toyota's shares were down 1.1 per cent on Tuesday morning, extending Monday's 1.8 per cent loss. Those of Honda dropped 2.3 per cent. Suzuki's and Mazda's shares both rose 0.9 per cent.

Toyota and Mazda said on Monday they had both halted shipments of some models.

ALSO READ: Toyota, other Japan automakers under fire for new lapses as safety scandal deepens

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