Land Rover, China Mobile criticized in CCTV show

Visitors look at a Nissan Qashqai sport-utility vehicle displayed at the Dongfeng Nissan booth, at the Wuhan Motor Show in Wuhan

Visitors look at a Nissan Qashqai sport-utility vehicle displayed at the Dongfeng Nissan booth, at the Wuhan Motor Show in Wuhan

 

China’s state-run television reported that Tata Motors Ltd.’s Jaguar Land Rover hasn’t handled an alleged fault properly, car dealerships inflate repair costs and China Mobile Ltd. enables fraudsters.
Jaguar Land Rover’s Range Rover Evoque SUVs have gearbox problems that the company has failed to fully address, according to China Central Television’s annual consumer rights program shown Sunday, citing customer complaints confirmed by reporter checks. This year’s “315 Gala” also contained allegations that dealers for brands including Nissan, Volkswagen and Mercedes overstated problems with vehicles and then overcharged for simple fixes.
The CCTV program, broadcast on March 15 each year to mark World Consumer Rights Day, typically has reporters with hidden cameras posing as customers to expose flaws at companies. Companies singled out in past years include McDonald’s Corp., Volkswagen AG, and Apple Inc., whose Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook apologized to Chinese consumers after 2013’s program.
“In addition to possible fines, there is the loss of reputation as the show receives wide media coverage and threads through social media,” said Jim Feldkamp, founder of Chinese website Mingjian.com, which reviews consumer products.
Jaguar Land Rover apologized to consumers for “the inconvenience and trouble caused” in a posting on its official microblog. The company said it is working to resolve the problem as quickly as possible.
On the car dealerships, Volkswagen said in an e-mail that it provides tools and training to its dealers, and regularly monitors their performance via means including audits. Customers are welcome to contact the company directly if they have problems with dealer service, the company said.
Dongfeng Nissan Passenger Vehicle Co., a joint venture between Japan’s Nissan Motor Co. and Wuhan, China-based Dongfeng Motor Corp., takes “very seriously” CCTV’s allegations that its dealers inflate simple repairs, and has already formed working groups to investigate the problem, according to an e-mailed statement.
Daimler AG, which owns Mercedes Benz, said in an emailed statement it is investigating the issues raised by CCTV. Daimler is “against this behavior by dealers as it constitutes an infringement on the rights of consumers”, the company said.
China Mobile and its sister company China Tietong Telecommunications Corp., owned by the same mainland parent group, allowed fraudsters to gain access to numbers used for official phone-company operations and failed to prevent the use of fake caller ID numbers, CCTV said. Fraudsters impersonated banks and the police to obtain money, the broadcaster said.
China Mobile spokeswoman Rainie Lei referred to the company’s statement on its official Weibo account and declined to comment further.
The Weibo statement says: “The problem of false calling reported by CCTV on its March 15 program is a serious violation of the legitimate rights and interests of consumers. China Mobile has instructed China Tietong Telecommunications Corp. Ltd, Guangdong Mobile and Shanghai Mobile to check this out carefully, and handle the matter seriously.”
Checks by reporters also showed it’s too easy to obtain bank cards with fraudulent documentation and mobile-phone SIM cards without the proper documentation, CCTV reported.
China has made efforts to protect its consumers better as the rising middle-class becomes more vocal on grouses from food and product safety lapses to air pollution. A new consumer protection law introduced last year imposed greater penalties for fraud and false advertising, and added return policies for online purchases. Bloomberg

Categories China