Volkswagen
to start firings over emissions scandal: sources
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[September 24, 2015]
By Jan Schwartz and Andreas Cremer
HAMBURG/BERLIN (Reuters) - Volkswagen will
start firing people responsible for rigging U.S. emissions tests and
shake up management on Friday, two sources familiar with the plans said,
as the German carmaker tries to get to grips with the biggest scandal in
its 78-year history.
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The supervisory board of Europe's biggest automaker is meeting on
Friday to decide a successor to chief executive Martin Winterkorn,
who resigned on Wednesday.
The sources said it would give initial findings from an internal
investigation into who was responsible for programming some diesel
cars to detect when they were being tested and alter the running of
the engines to conceal their true emissions.
Top managers could also be replaced, even if they did not know about
the deception, with U.S. chief Michael Horn and group sales chief
Christian Klingler seen as potentially vulnerable.
Volkswagen shares have plunged around 20 percent since U.S.
regulators said on Friday the company could face up to $18 billion
in penalties for falsifying emissions tests.
The company said on Tuesday 11 million of its cars globally were
fitted with engines that had shown a "noticeable deviation" in
emission levels between testing and road use.
Regulators in Europe and Asia have said they will also investigate,
while Volkswagen faces criminal inquiries and lawsuits from cheated
customers. When he resigned, Winterkorn denied he knew of any
wrongdoing but said the company needed a fresh start.
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"There will be further personnel consequences in the next days and
we are calling for those consequences," Volkswagen board member Olaf
Lies told the Bavarian broadcasting network, without elaborating.
The heads of Volkswagen's Porsche brand, Matthias Mueller; Audi
brand, Rupert Stadler; and VW brand, Herbert Diess, are seen as the
front-runners to succeed Winterkorn, three people familiar with the
matter told Reuters on Wednesday.
(Writing by Mark Potter; Editing by Maria Sheahan and David Stamp)
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