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Berlin reacts to VW scandal

September 21, 2015

German ministers have said they'll do everything in their power to help shed light on carmaker VW's scandal surrounding its efforts to thwart US pollution tests. They saw no lasting damage to German industry.

https://p.dw.com/p/1Ga5h
German Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/A. Gebert

The German government said it had ordered extensive tests on all Volkswagen diesel models in the country.

Transport Minister Alexander Dobrindt told the mass-circulation "Bild" daily that he'd asked the Federal Motor Transport Authority to immediately have specific and comprehensive tests conducted by independent experts, following revelations that the carmaker had programmed software to thwart US pollution control checks.

Berlin called on the nation's leading auto makers to demonstrate that they'd not manipulated their emission tests in the country by presenting "reliable information" to the authorities.

Manageable damage?

Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel lashed out at VW's behavior in the US, calling it a worst-case scenario, and acknowledged concerns the recent revelations could damage the car industry's reputation as a whole.

At the same time, Gabriel insisted the VW case was "not typical."

"The term 'Made in Germany' stands for quality worldwide," Gabriel argued. "I do not think that the current scandal will result in lasting and fundamental damage to German industry as a whole."

hg/tko (dpa, AFP)