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Updated Sunday, February 7, 2010 2:59 pm TWN, By Yuri Kageyama and Malcolm Foster, AP Japan media criticizes Toyota presidentAkio Toyoda, the founder's grandson appointed to lead Toyota Motor Corp. last June, emerged late Friday to apologize and address criticism that the company mishandled a crisis over sticking gas pedals. But he stopped short of ordering a recall for Toyota's iconic Prius hybrid for separate braking problems. Toyoda's appearance before reporters at a company office in the central Japanese city of Nagoya made front pages of the country's leading newspapers but won no praise. “Words are not enough,” the top Nikkei business daily commented in an editorial. “The company's crisis management ability is being subjected to severe scrutiny.” “Utterly too late,” the nationwide Asahi newspaper said of Toyota's delayed reaction since the crisis arose Jan. 21 with a global recall of millions of vehicles. “The entire world is watching how Toyota can humbly learn from its series of recent failures and make safe cars.” At his first news conference since the recall of 4.5 million cars, Toyoda promised to beef up quality control and said he would head a special committee to review quality checks, go over consumer complaints and listen to outside experts to develop a fix. Toyota's failure to stem its widening safety crisis has stunned American consumers and experts who had come to expect only streamlined efficiency from a company at the pinnacle of the global auto industry. “Toyota needs to be more assertive in terms of providing consumers comfort that the immediate problem is being addressed ... and that it can deal with these crises,” said Sherman Abe, a business professor at Hitotsubashi University in Tokyo. It took prodding from the U.S. government for Toyota to recall the vehicles, about half of them in North America, for gas pedals that can stick and cause sudden acceleration. |
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