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 Faulty Takata Airbags Killing People, Instead of Saving Lives

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jayraptor
post Nov 15 2014, 12:52 AM

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QUOTE(EnergyAnalyst @ Nov 14 2014, 09:43 AM)
this mask does not protect neck and chest, should get an iron man suit instead
*
Here, you might want to read this.

https://my.news.yahoo.com/honda-reports-exp...2--finance.html

It has reached here, claiming 1 local woman's life. Still no recall? Anyone still want to buy Honta? New ones got more airbags since they have thin frames with less protection that would cave in easily upon impact. As told many times, passive safety is top priority followed by active safety which is secondary. Not supposed to depend on active safety alone.
wayfeel
post Nov 15 2014, 01:17 AM

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QUOTE(jayraptor @ Nov 15 2014, 12:52 AM)
Here, you might want to read this.

It has reached here, claiming 1 local woman's life. Still no recall? Anyone still want to buy Honta?
*
I hope honda sales will freefall. let ppl buy become cheap cheap biggrin.gif
let the koreans takeover then high competition that will benefit the awaiting customers flex.gif
Then just hope for a better comeback biggrin.gif

The value of life can be measured by how many times your soul has been deeply stirred. -Soichiro H



This post has been edited by wayfeel: Nov 15 2014, 01:20 AM
jayraptor
post Nov 15 2014, 06:45 PM

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QUOTE(wayfeel @ Nov 15 2014, 01:17 AM)
I hope honda sales will freefall. let ppl buy become cheap cheap biggrin.gif
let the koreans takeover then high competition that will benefit the awaiting customers  flex.gif
Then just hope for a better comeback  biggrin.gif

The value of life can be measured by how many times your soul has been deeply stirred. -Soichiro H
*
Any links where I can see the photo of victims? There are 139 injury cases so far with 5 fatalities. How come can't find much info on google? Got cover up or something blocking our access?
K3nnYkl82
post Nov 15 2014, 07:56 PM

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QUOTE(jayraptor @ Nov 15 2014, 06:45 PM)
Any links where I can see the photo of victims? There are 139 injury cases so far with 5 fatalities. How come can't find much info on google? Got cover up or something blocking our access?
*
I will give u ur favourite quote...

Go google urself la!
SUSnm7
post Nov 15 2014, 08:59 PM

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QUOTE(jayraptor @ Nov 15 2014, 06:45 PM)
Any links where I can see the photo of victims? There are 139 injury cases so far with 5 fatalities. How come can't find much info on google? Got cover up or something blocking our access?
*
U need to redirect with google dns... Malaysia gahmen is hiding somethin
SUSnm7
post Nov 16 2014, 08:17 AM

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QUOTE(jayraptor @ Nov 15 2014, 12:52 AM)
Here, you might want to read this.

https://my.news.yahoo.com/honda-reports-exp...2--finance.html

It has reached here, claiming 1 local woman's life. Still no recall? Anyone still want to buy Honta? New ones got more airbags since they have thin frames with less protection that would cave in easily upon impact. As told many times, passive safety is top priority followed by active safety which is secondary. Not supposed to depend on active safety alone.
*
honda malaysia website already listed a recall for identified cars...
K3nnYkl82
post Nov 16 2014, 09:33 AM

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The other thread tutup jo..

I really want to know from prof jay and friends, whether is Nissan cheating saying that GTR using dual clutch but actually is single clutch sequencial gearbox (F1 technology) or is F1 cheating whereby they are actually using dual clutch system in F1 racing..
DeMl
post Nov 16 2014, 11:13 AM

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Honda air bag victim was in final week of pregnancy
http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/malaysi...ek-of-pregnancy
SUSnm7
post Nov 16 2014, 11:38 AM

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QUOTE(K3nnYkl82 @ Nov 16 2014, 09:33 AM)
The other thread tutup jo..

I really want to know from prof jay and friends, whether is Nissan cheating saying that GTR using dual clutch but actually is single clutch sequencial gearbox (F1 technology) or is F1 cheating whereby they are actually using dual clutch system in F1 racing..
*
shhhhiiiiaaaaatttt... this is bigger than spygate man..

then CBA-R35 owners can swap for this already...
http://www.ricardo.com/en-GB/Our-Markets/H...sions/Products/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nissan_GT-R#F...ld_Championship

K3nnYkl82
post Nov 16 2014, 11:42 AM

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QUOTE(nm7 @ Nov 16 2014, 11:38 AM)
shhhhiiiiaaaaatttt... this is bigger than spygate man..

then CBA-R35 owners can swap for this already...
http://www.ricardo.com/en-GB/Our-Markets/H...sions/Products/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nissan_GT-R#F...ld_Championship
*
Swap apa!! Prof jay said is F1 technology.. So we need to know nissan or F1 cheating now
PedangGila
post Nov 16 2014, 12:04 PM

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And plodua also installed takata into its cars? Plotom? Haiyadai?
SUSnm7
post Nov 16 2014, 12:44 PM

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QUOTE(K3nnYkl82 @ Nov 16 2014, 11:42 AM)
Swap apa!! Prof jay said is F1 technology.. So we need to know nissan or F1 cheating now
*
Yea....f@k i am so stupid...prof make me look like a total n00b..
jayraptor
post Nov 29 2014, 11:52 PM

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QUOTE(nm7 @ Nov 16 2014, 11:38 AM)
shhhhiiiiaaaaatttt... this is bigger than spygate man..

then CBA-R35 owners can swap for this already...
http://www.ricardo.com/en-GB/Our-Markets/H...sions/Products/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nissan_GT-R#F...ld_Championship
*
You put anything unusual in your car, when it gets faulty, there won't be anyone could repair. You'll end up buying brand new having to pay for shipping, high tax and GST. Don't expect the price to be cheap, when it reaches here, it would be double especially this gearbox is not manufactured in Japan but Europe some more. Tax is charge on total sums of price of goods + shipping fee. If Honta City CVT gearbox in 2008 costs RM17k plus labour & fitting close to RM20k. Next year onwards you expect even higher with double tax.

This GTR racing gearbox, how much would it be? RM40-60k nett? Don't forget the technical labour charge and cost of replacing the gearbox of old with new one. No trade in nor discount, you can take home the faulty old gearbox & paying lorry fees if you think they are making money out of it. Most would leave the old gearbox behind as there's no use of it unless you want to sell at kedai besi buruk.
K3nnYkl82
post Nov 30 2014, 05:08 PM

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QUOTE(jayraptor @ Nov 29 2014, 11:52 PM)
You put anything unusual in your car, when it gets faulty, there won't be anyone could repair. You'll end up buying brand new having to pay for shipping, high tax and GST. Don't expect the price to be cheap, when it reaches here, it would be double especially this  gearbox is not manufactured in Japan but Europe some more. Tax is charge on total sums of price of goods + shipping fee. If Honta City CVT gearbox in 2008 costs RM17k plus labour & fitting close to RM20k. Next year onwards you expect even higher with double tax.

This GTR racing gearbox, how much would it be? RM40-60k nett? Don't forget the technical labour charge and cost of replacing the gearbox of old with new one. No trade in nor discount, you can take home the faulty old gearbox & paying lorry fees if you think they are making money out of it. Most would leave the old gearbox behind as there's no use of it unless you want to sell at kedai besi buruk.
*
Hey prof.. You are back!!!

No we are not interested in the cost of the GTR gearbox..
All the while the debate was about GTR using F1 gearbox technology as claim by you and your fellow engineer friends.. We are more interested to know is that Nissan lieing to us or F1 lieing.. Everyone knows it will cost a boom for the GTR gearbox.. We need to know who is lieing now..

Thanks..

jayraptor
post Nov 30 2014, 05:15 PM

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QUOTE(K3nnYkl82 @ Nov 30 2014, 05:08 PM)
Hey prof.. You are back!!!

No we are not interested in the cost of the GTR gearbox..
All the while the debate was about GTR using F1 gearbox technology as claim by you and your fellow engineer friends.. We are more interested to know is that Nissan lieing to us or F1 lieing.. Everyone knows it will cost a boom for the GTR gearbox.. We need to know who is lieing now..

Thanks..
*
The point here is, the GTR is not using normal gearbox used in common cars. Not even in super sports car. Imagine the Fatlady with CVT also can end up with no gearbox after its reel dislocated, now GTR wanted to give 1st of its kind only gearbox, expect the same fate then.

When comes to car ownership, people is more concern on whether they could afford to maintain and own the car be it rich or poor. Even if the person is rich, when he gets bored, he would want to sell off the GTR 1 day and say the gearbox damage, would you buy it second hand from him? FYI, bank loan does not lend you cash for repair mostly and nowadays, they are quite strict that they wanted to check the car condition also. Puspakom won't let you pass if the car can't even move.
K3nnYkl82
post Nov 30 2014, 05:22 PM

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QUOTE(jayraptor @ Nov 30 2014, 05:15 PM)
The point here is, the GTR is not using normal gearbox used in common cars. Not even in super sports car. Imagine the Fatlady with CVT also can end up with no gearbox after its reel dislocated, now GTR wanted to give 1st of its kind only gearbox, expect the same fate then.

When comes to car ownership, people is more concern on whether they could afford to maintain and own the car be it rich or poor. Even if the person is rich, when he gets bored, he would want to sell off the GTR 1 day and say the gearbox damage, would you buy it second hand from him? FYI, bank loan does not lend you cash for repair mostly and nowadays, they are quite strict that they wanted to check the car condition also. Puspakom won't let you pass if the car can't even move.
*
Wah like that also can turn ur theory from F1 gearbox to the cost... Kudos.. I think u become salesman sure very successfull.. Dead bite till alive

TSVolkswagen2
post Dec 5 2014, 06:27 PM

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Just stumbled upon this.

https://my.news.yahoo.com/pregnant-woman-de...-231913568.html

Pregnant woman’s death a ‘wake-up call’ to Malaysia’s auto safety problems
user posted image

Welhelmo Rodriguez Caido Jr, 41, blurted out the warning as he was riding in the passenger seat of a Honda City driven by his wife, whom he endearingly called Mummy. A moment later, as they entered an intersection in the town of Sibu on July 27, a collision with an oncoming car set off the air bag with such force it knocked Caido out.

On the driver’s side, the inflator inside the air bag, made by Takata Corp (7312), malfunctioned and ruptured, firing a one-inch-wide shard of metal into the neck of his wife, Law Suk Leh.


Law, 43, and eight-and-a-half months pregnant, died on the way to the hospital, becoming the first reported casualty outside the US in the deepening air-bag crisis gripping the auto industry. In the US, Takata air bags, used by carmakers including Toyota Motor Corp (7203), Honda Motor Co and General Motors Co, have been tied to four deaths and at least 139 injuries, according to government reports, lawsuits and automaker disclosures.

“Takata deeply regrets the injuries and fatalities that have occurred in accidents involving ruptured air-bag inflators,” chairman Shigehisa Takada said in a statement. Hideyuki Matsumoto, a spokesman for Takata, declined to comment specifically on the Malaysian accident.

Safety regulations

The Malaysia crash graphically illustrates how the globalisation of the car industry also means the globalisation of auto safety problems. And unlike the US, with its network of federal and state safety agencies, recall notices and lawyers willing to pursue cases against manufacturers, drivers are at risk in Asian countries where auto safety regulations lag and authorities wash their hands of any duty to alert drivers of potentially lethal defects.

“The incident is probably a wake-up call for Malaysia and other Asian countries,” said Jochen Siebert, managing director at JSC Automotive Consulting, which advises carmakers. “People in Malaysia and other Asian countries will now ask Honda about whether their cars are affected. This will force governments to speed to the process of formalisation of regulation of safety in cars.”

Caido’s second-hand 2003 Honda wasn’t among the more than 13 million vehicles recalled worldwide because of defective Takata air bags. Honda called back another 170,000 vehicles last month after investigating the Malaysia death, Kosuke Kachi, a Tokyo-based spokesman, said by phone. Owners of affected cars were notified by mail and phone calls, and the company posted the information on its websites.
Recall Warnings

In the US, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has issued several warnings on the matter and pushed carmakers to hasten their recalls. Takata rejected its demand to expand the safety campaign nationwide, NHTSA said in a statement. The agency said it would review the air-bag maker’s response and determine the next steps.

Even so, NHTSA is still being accused by members of Congress for not doing enough. Lawmakers are questioning Tokyo-based Takata through hearings reminiscent of the scrutiny faced by GM this year over faulty ignition switches and Toyota for unintended acceleration in 2009-2010. The media report on the issue as front-page news.

The Malaysian police are leaving it up to Honda and Takata to inform the public of their faulty air bags and aren’t planning any public service campaigns to spread the message wider, said Mohd Fuad Abdul Latiff, Malaysia’s federal traffic police chief.

‘Responsibility ends’

“Our responsibility ends there,” Mohd Fuad said. Prosecutors will now pick up the case. The transport ministry did not reply to an e-mail seeking comment.

Honda didn’t disclose the Malaysia accident until November 13, though it learned in August of the incident that resulted in the deaths of Law and her unborn child. Honda, Japan’s third-largest carmaker, would disclose about two weeks later that it had underreported injuries and deaths from vehicle defects 1,729 times in the US over 11 years, eight of those cases involving ruptures of Takata air-bag inflator.

“We apologise to the people who died in Honda cars equipped with Takata-made air bags as well as their families, and we want to send our sincere condolence,” said Atsushi Ohara, a spokesman for Honda. “We will exert every effort to replace the parts for vehicles subjected to recalls.”

Road deaths

Most Asian auto-safety supervision lags behind the US. The United Nations estimates that more than 700,000 lives are lost each year through road traffic accidents, costing 1% to 3% of gross national product in economic losses. One key challenge is the availability of reliable and regular accident and fatality data, which is collected by different ministries and agencies. The lack of mechanisms to share information results in uncoordinated responses, the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific said on its website.

In India, where road accidents claim one life every five minutes, the government is trying to pass a law to set up a NHTSA-like agency to oversee recalls and set crash-test standards. Thailand’s transport ministry and police have said they’re not aware of any incidents involving suspect airbags.

The lack of widespread knowledge of the Takata air-bag defect may be particularly dangerous in Asia. Takata has said that the air bags are most prone to malfunction in humid environments, which characterises most of Asia’s developing countries.

Legal recourse

Asians also don’t have the same avenues to seek legal recourse against manufacturers. At least nine cases have been filed this year in US courts claiming deaths or personal injuries caused by exploding Takata air bags. Takata also faces at least 50 proposed class actions in the US brought by customers seeking payment for alleged losses in vehicle value connected to the recalls, with Honda named in all but two of these cases.

Most Asian countries, by contrast, have restrictions on class actions or group litigation.

The following story is based on interviews with Caido, Malaysian authorities, hospital staff and the driver of the other vehicle. Law’s sister declined to be interviewed for the story while her uncle, who authorities said helped link her death to the air bag based on his research, couldn’t be reached for comment.

‘Wonderful Sunday’

July 27 began as a “wonderful Sunday” for Caido and his wife and their seven-year-old son, Welhelm. Caido didn’t get to spend much time with his family after he joined Adinin Works & Engineering over a year ago as an electrician in an offshore rig, where he’d have to spend eight-week stretches in between two-week breaks. Even the heat – it was Sibu’s hottest day of the year, with temperatures reaching 37 degrees Celsius – didn’t distract from the day.

The family had come there two days earlier from their home in Brunei to visit relatives before making their way to Kuching, the capital of Sarawak, where Law was due to deliver her second baby on August 16.

Caido had been with Law for 10 years and got married in 2009. The family was excited about their soon-to-come second child, who would be named Elsa after the snow queen featured in Walt Disney Co’s animated hit “Frozen”. Their son chose the name. While Caido would usually call his wife “Mummy”, she’d call him “Papa”.

In the morning, Caido bought food and some hair dye for his wife, a music teacher at the Symphony Music School in Brunei, who was greying at 43.

“I told her ‘Mummy, at our age, we have to use colour to look pretty’,” Caido said. “She was very pretty and very happy. It was a very wonderful Sunday.”

Drive home

That evening, the couple went to church and left their son behind with his grandparents because he was hyperactive. They took their car, a Honda City Law bought around 2005, with seats wrapped in plastic and still in good condition. During the drive home, with Mummy at the wheel, they talked about the coming baby and how they would care for her.

Then at around 7.40pm came the intersection.

The car opposite Caido’s was a Toyota Corolla Altis, whose driver asked not to be identified because the investigation is ongoing. The Toyota driver was headed for the night market with his brother, their girlfriends and a couple of cousins. As the driver began a right turn, his uncle, who was in a separate car behind him, honked at him to indicate he was going the wrong way. The driver said he tried to slow down when the collision occurred, though the impact wasn’t very hard.

A ‘bump’

Caido recalls the accident as more like a “bump” than a full-on collision. As he awoke from a few seconds of unconsciousness, he turned to his side and said, “Mummy, are you OK?” She didn’t respond. He quickly got out and rushed to open her door.

“I saw a lot of blood coming out from her neck,” Caido said late last month in his first media interview. “I started panicking.”

Caido tried to cover the wounds with his hands. He then shouted for assistance to remove her from the car and bring her to the hospital. Someone said they had called an ambulance.

“I said I could not wait for the ambulance and please, please if anyone could help us,’” Caido said.

Bystanders, including passengers in the Toyota, helped Caido move his wife onto the back of a Toyota Hilux pick-up truck. One witness at the scene said Law was still alive gasping for breath, though bleeding profusely.

Sibu hospital

As they rushed toward the hospital, Caido was holding his bleeding wife, uttering “don’t leave me, don’t leave me, don’t leave me.”

About 10 minutes later, they spotted an ambulance, and waved it down. As the paramedics transferred his blood-soaked wife and tried to save her, Caido sat down in the ambulance and began to pray.

At the Sibu Hospital, a doctor, after learning the length of the pregnancy, told Caido they would remove the 37-week-old foetus from the womb. While Caido didn’t yet know if his wife was alive, she had been pronounced dead on arrival.

An emergency cesarean section was performed on Law, and Elsa was rushed to the neonatal intensive care unit. Her heartbeat was weak as her mother’s death deprived her of oxygen.

A hospital staff member soon delivered the news that his wife was gone and that their baby was in critical condition.

“I was shaking,” Caido said, his voice breaking in anguish. “I could not believe it.”

The night of the accident, he returned from the hospital and went to bed with his son. In the coming days, he explained to Welhelm that his mother was in heaven, unable to tell him directly that she had died.

On July 29, two days after the accident, Caido was told Elsa wouldn’t make it because her heart was too weak. The hospital told Caido they’d detach the ventilator sustaining Elsa so he could hold his baby for the last time.

“I told her to take care of her Mummy wherever they go,” Caido said in tears. “She slowly died in my arms.” – The Edge Financial Daily, December 5, 2014.
ryder_78
post Dec 7 2014, 03:36 PM

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Sad. Looks like Honda vehicles in Malaysia are also affected by this Takata air bag. Scary to think the deployment of Takata air bag will launch metal shrapnel that will kill the occupants. Looks like this news is only published in Yahoo and Malaysian Insider. The local media is keeping quiet probably not making this a big issue with the big number of vehicles with Takata air bags.

Car distributors will have to offer recall if this issue blows up. Does anyone have any idea the year of the models which are affected? Year 2000 to 2008 models?

QUOTE(Volkswagen2 @ Dec 5 2014, 06:27 PM)
Just stumbled upon this.

https://my.news.yahoo.com/pregnant-woman-de...-231913568.html

Pregnant woman’s death a ‘wake-up call’ to Malaysia’s auto safety problems
user posted image

Welhelmo Rodriguez Caido Jr, 41, blurted out the warning as he was riding in the passenger seat of a Honda City driven by his wife, whom he endearingly called Mummy. A moment later, as they entered an intersection in the town of Sibu on July 27, a collision with an oncoming car set off the air bag with such force it knocked Caido out.

On the driver’s side, the inflator inside the air bag, made by Takata Corp (7312), malfunctioned and ruptured, firing a one-inch-wide shard of metal into the neck of his wife, Law Suk Leh.


Law, 43, and eight-and-a-half months pregnant, died on the way to the hospital, becoming the first reported casualty outside the US in the deepening air-bag crisis gripping the auto industry. In the US, Takata air bags, used by carmakers including Toyota Motor Corp (7203), Honda Motor Co and General Motors Co, have been tied to four deaths and at least 139 injuries, according to government reports, lawsuits and automaker disclosures.

“Takata deeply regrets the injuries and fatalities that have occurred in accidents involving ruptured air-bag inflators,” chairman Shigehisa Takada said in a statement. Hideyuki Matsumoto, a spokesman for Takata, declined to comment specifically on the Malaysian accident.

Safety regulations

The Malaysia crash graphically illustrates how the globalisation of the car industry also means the globalisation of auto safety problems. And unlike the US, with its network of federal and state safety agencies, recall notices and lawyers willing to pursue cases against manufacturers, drivers are at risk in Asian countries where auto safety regulations lag and authorities wash their hands of any duty to alert drivers of potentially lethal defects.

“The incident is probably a wake-up call for Malaysia and other Asian countries,” said Jochen Siebert, managing director at JSC Automotive Consulting, which advises carmakers. “People in Malaysia and other Asian countries will now ask Honda about whether their cars are affected. This will force governments to speed to the process of formalisation of regulation of safety in cars.”

Caido’s second-hand 2003 Honda wasn’t among the more than 13 million vehicles recalled worldwide because of defective Takata air bags. Honda called back another 170,000 vehicles last month after investigating the Malaysia death, Kosuke Kachi, a Tokyo-based spokesman, said by phone. Owners of affected cars were notified by mail and phone calls, and the company posted the information on its websites.
Recall Warnings

In the US, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has issued several warnings on the matter and pushed carmakers to hasten their recalls. Takata rejected its demand to expand the safety campaign nationwide, NHTSA said in a statement. The agency said it would review the air-bag maker’s response and determine the next steps.

Even so, NHTSA is still being accused by members of Congress for not doing enough. Lawmakers are questioning Tokyo-based Takata through hearings reminiscent of the scrutiny faced by GM this year over faulty ignition switches and Toyota for unintended acceleration in 2009-2010. The media report on the issue as front-page news.

The Malaysian police are leaving it up to Honda and Takata to inform the public of their faulty air bags and aren’t planning any public service campaigns to spread the message wider, said Mohd Fuad Abdul Latiff, Malaysia’s federal traffic police chief.

‘Responsibility ends’

“Our responsibility ends there,” Mohd Fuad said. Prosecutors will now pick up the case. The transport ministry did not reply to an e-mail seeking comment.

Honda didn’t disclose the Malaysia accident until November 13, though it learned in August of the incident that resulted in the deaths of Law and her unborn child. Honda, Japan’s third-largest carmaker, would disclose about two weeks later that it had underreported injuries and deaths from vehicle defects 1,729 times in the US over 11 years, eight of those cases involving ruptures of Takata air-bag inflator.

“We apologise to the people who died in Honda cars equipped with Takata-made air bags as well as their families, and we want to send our sincere condolence,” said Atsushi Ohara, a spokesman for Honda. “We will exert every effort to replace the parts for vehicles subjected to recalls.”

Road deaths

Most Asian auto-safety supervision lags behind the US. The United Nations estimates that more than 700,000 lives are lost each year through road traffic accidents, costing 1% to 3% of gross national product in economic losses. One key challenge is the availability of reliable and regular accident and fatality data, which is collected by different ministries and agencies. The lack of mechanisms to share information results in uncoordinated responses, the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific said on its website.

In India, where road accidents claim one life every five minutes, the government is trying to pass a law to set up a NHTSA-like agency to oversee recalls and set crash-test standards. Thailand’s transport ministry and police have said they’re not aware of any incidents involving suspect airbags.

The lack of widespread knowledge of the Takata air-bag defect may be particularly dangerous in Asia. Takata has said that the air bags are most prone to malfunction in humid environments, which characterises most of Asia’s developing countries.

Legal recourse

Asians also don’t have the same avenues to seek legal recourse against manufacturers. At least nine cases have been filed this year in US courts claiming deaths or personal injuries caused by exploding Takata air bags. Takata also faces at least 50 proposed class actions in the US brought by customers seeking payment for alleged losses in vehicle value connected to the recalls, with Honda named in all but two of these cases.

Most Asian countries, by contrast, have restrictions on class actions or group litigation.

The following story is based on interviews with Caido, Malaysian authorities, hospital staff and the driver of the other vehicle. Law’s sister declined to be interviewed for the story while her uncle, who authorities said helped link her death to the air bag based on his research, couldn’t be reached for comment.

‘Wonderful Sunday’

July 27 began as a “wonderful Sunday” for Caido and his wife and their seven-year-old son, Welhelm. Caido didn’t get to spend much time with his family after he joined Adinin Works & Engineering over a year ago as an electrician in an offshore rig, where he’d have to spend eight-week stretches in between two-week breaks. Even the heat – it was Sibu’s hottest day of the year, with temperatures reaching 37 degrees Celsius – didn’t distract from the day.

The family had come there two days earlier from their home in Brunei to visit relatives before making their way to Kuching, the capital of Sarawak, where Law was due to deliver her second baby on August 16.

Caido had been with Law for 10 years and got married in 2009. The family was excited about their soon-to-come second child, who would be named Elsa after the snow queen featured in Walt Disney Co’s animated hit “Frozen”. Their son chose the name. While Caido would usually call his wife “Mummy”, she’d call him “Papa”.

In the morning, Caido bought food and some hair dye for his wife, a music teacher at the Symphony Music School in Brunei, who was greying at 43.

“I told her ‘Mummy, at our age, we have to use colour to look pretty’,” Caido said. “She was very pretty and very happy. It was a very wonderful Sunday.”

Drive home

That evening, the couple went to church and left their son behind with his grandparents because he was hyperactive. They took their car, a Honda City Law bought around 2005, with seats wrapped in plastic and still in good condition. During the drive home, with Mummy at the wheel, they talked about the coming baby and how they would care for her.

Then at around 7.40pm came the intersection.

The car opposite Caido’s was a Toyota Corolla Altis, whose driver asked not to be identified because the investigation is ongoing. The Toyota driver was headed for the night market with his brother, their girlfriends and a couple of cousins. As the driver began a right turn, his uncle, who was in a separate car behind him, honked at him to indicate he was going the wrong way. The driver said he tried to slow down when the collision occurred, though the impact wasn’t very hard.

A ‘bump’

Caido recalls the accident as more like a “bump” than a full-on collision. As he awoke from a few seconds of unconsciousness, he turned to his side and said, “Mummy, are you OK?” She didn’t respond. He quickly got out and rushed to open her door.

“I saw a lot of blood coming out from her neck,” Caido said late last month in his first media interview. “I started panicking.”

Caido tried to cover the wounds with his hands. He then shouted for assistance to remove her from the car and bring her to the hospital. Someone said they had called an ambulance.

“I said I could not wait for the ambulance and please, please if anyone could help us,’” Caido said.

Bystanders, including passengers in the Toyota, helped Caido move his wife onto the back of a Toyota Hilux pick-up truck. One witness at the scene said Law was still alive gasping for breath, though bleeding profusely.

Sibu hospital

As they rushed toward the hospital, Caido was holding his bleeding wife, uttering “don’t leave me, don’t leave me, don’t leave me.”

About 10 minutes later, they spotted an ambulance, and waved it down. As the paramedics transferred his blood-soaked wife and tried to save her, Caido sat down in the ambulance and began to pray.

At the Sibu Hospital, a doctor, after learning the length of the pregnancy, told Caido they would remove the 37-week-old foetus from the womb. While Caido didn’t yet know if his wife was alive, she had been pronounced dead on arrival.

An emergency cesarean section was performed on Law, and Elsa was rushed to the neonatal intensive care unit. Her heartbeat was weak as her mother’s death deprived her of oxygen.

A hospital staff member soon delivered the news that his wife was gone and that their baby was in critical condition.

“I was shaking,” Caido said, his voice breaking in anguish. “I could not believe it.”

The night of the accident, he returned from the hospital and went to bed with his son. In the coming days, he explained to Welhelm that his mother was in heaven, unable to tell him directly that she had died.

On July 29, two days after the accident, Caido was told Elsa wouldn’t make it because her heart was too weak. The hospital told Caido they’d detach the ventilator sustaining Elsa so he could hold his baby for the last time.

“I told her to take care of her Mummy wherever they go,” Caido said in tears. “She slowly died in my arms.” – The Edge Financial Daily, December 5, 2014.
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ncode
post Dec 7 2014, 05:43 PM

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QUOTE(ryder_78 @ Dec 7 2014, 03:36 PM)
Sad. Looks like Honda vehicles in Malaysia are also affected by this Takata air bag. Scary to think the deployment of Takata air bag will launch metal shrapnel that will kill the occupants. Looks like this news is only published in Yahoo and Malaysian Insider. The local media is keeping quiet probably not making this a big issue with the big number of vehicles with Takata air bags.

Car distributors will have to offer recall if this issue blows up. Does anyone have any idea the year of the models which are affected? Year 2000 to 2008 models?
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http://www.honda.com.my/microsite/product_updates/

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Dwango
post Dec 8 2014, 08:22 AM

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QUOTE(ncode @ Dec 7 2014, 05:43 PM)
http://www.honda.com.my/microsite/product_updates/

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I thought some Civic and Accord models are also affected, and Honda Malaysia just issued recall on the City and Jazz.

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