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The Washington Times Online Edition

Toyota recalls 437,000 Priuses worldwide

In this Feb. 6, 2010 photo, a couple check the hatchback of a Toyota Motor Corp.'s new Prius hybrid at the Toyota museum in Toyota, central Japan. A news report says that Toyota is preparing to soon report to the Japanese and U.S. governments its plan to issue a recall over a brake problem with its Prius hybrid. Kyodo News agency reported Monday, Feb. 8 that the company is planning such a move as early as Tuesday in Japan. The report also said that Toyota would "promptly" do the same in the U.S. (AP Photo/Itsuo Inouye)
In this Feb. 6, 2010 photo, a couple check the hatchback of a Toyota Motor Corp.’s new Prius hybrid at the Toyota museum in Toyota, central Japan. A news report says that Toyota is preparing to soon report to the Japanese and U.S. governments its plan to issue a recall over a brake problem with its Prius hybrid. Kyodo News agency reported Monday, Feb. 8 that the company is planning such a move as early as Tuesday in Japan. The report also said that Toyota would “promptly” do the same in the U.S. (AP Photo/Itsuo Inouye)

UPDATED:

TOKYO (AP) — Toyota says it is recalling about 437,000 Prius and other hybrid vehicles worldwide to fix brake problems — the latest in a string of embarrassing safety lapses at the world’s largest automaker.

“I don’t see Toyota as an infallible company that never makes mistakes,” President Akio Toyoda said at a press conference Tuesday in Tokyo. “We will face up to the facts and correct the problem, putting customers’ safety and convenience first.”

The recall is the latest blow to Toyota Motor Corp., which is in the midst of recalling more than 7 million vehicles worldwide because of problems with floor mats, which can trap gas pedals, and faulty gas pedals that are slow to return to the idle position. The 2010 Prius wasn’t part of those recalls.

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There have been about 200 complaints in Japan and the U.S. about a delay when the brakes in the Prius were pressed in cold conditions and on some bumpy roads. The delay doesn’t indicate a brake failure. The company says the problem can be fixed in 40 minutes with new software that oversees the controls of the antilock brakes.

“Let me assure everyone that we will redouble our commitment to quality as the lifeline of our company,” Toyoda said.

Toyota officials went to Japan’s Transport Ministry earlier Tuesday to formally notify officials the company is recalling the 2010 Prius gas-electric hybrid — the world’s top-selling hybrid car. The automaker is also recalling two other hybrid models in Japan, the Lexus HS250h sedan, sold in the U.S. and Japan, and the Sai, which is sold only in Japan.

The 223,000 cars being recalled in Japan include nearly 200,000 Priuses sold from April last year through Monday, according to papers the automaker filed with the ministry. The Prius is Japan’s top-selling car.

In the U.S., Toyota will recall 133,000 Prius cars and 14,500 Lexus HS250h vehicles. Nearly 53,000 Priuses are also being recalled in Europe.

Owners in Japan of the 2010 Prius can get their cars fixed starting Wednesday, said Ryusuke Itazaki, chief of the recall department at the Transport Ministry.

He said Toyota would suspend production of the Sai and Lexus HS250h in Japan as the company doesn’t have the updated software for those models yet.

If drivers experience any delayed reaction when depressing the brakes in any of these models, they should keep pressing, he said.

Itazaki said complaints about the brakes started coming in as the weather got colder, particularly from northern Japan.

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