Japan’s
number two carmaker Nissan said on Thursday it would recall some
841,000 compact cars worldwide due to a steering wheel problem.
The
recall will cover the Micra, known as the March in some markets, and
Cube models produced in Japan and Britain between 2002 and 2006, a
company spokeswoman said.
Nissan
sold the cars — 763,000 units of Micra and 78,000 of Cube — in Africa,
Asia, Europe, Latin America and the Middle East, but has not received
any accident reports related to the glitch, the spokeswoman said.
“A
bolt in the steering wheel system may not be fastened appropriately,
and in the worst-case scenario, the cars can’t be driven properly,” she
said.
“We will fix the problem free of charge in accordance with regulations in each country.”
The
latest recall is another blow to the rock-steady reputation for safety
and reliability that Japan’s huge automakers once had.
Last
month four auto giants including Nissan said they were recalling nearly
3.4 million vehicles worldwide, in a blow for the country’s carmakers
which once traded on a reputation for quality and reliability.
Toyota, Nissan, Honda and Mazda, all cited the same malfunction of the Japanese-made passenger-side airbags.
In January Toyota said it would recall nearly 1.3 million vehicles globally over airbag and windscreen wiper problems.
At
the end of last year Toyota said it had agreed to pay about $1.1
billion to settle a class action lawsuit launched by US vehicle owners
affected by a series of mass recalls.
Despite
its travails, Toyota recaptured the title of world’s biggest automaker
from General Motors in 2012, selling 9.75 million vehicles around the
planet.
Nissan’s
recall report came after the Tokyo stock market closed on Thursday with
the benchmark Nikkei index down 7.32 per cent. Nissan shares fell 3.86
per cent to 1,168 yen.
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