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Raids in Fiat Chrysler, Iveco 'dieselgate' probe: German prosecutors
by Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) July 22, 2020

Investigators in Germany, Switzerland and Italy are searching several sites over suspicion that vehicles built by Fiat Chrysler and Iveco groups may have been fitted with illegal defeat devices, as the "dieselgate" emissions scandal widened.

Coordinated cross-border raids were being carried out at "ten commercial properties" across the three countries, the public prosecutor for the German state of Hesse said in a statement.

Fiat Chrysler and Inveco's parent company CNH Industrial later issued statements confirming that their offices were among those searched.

Both said they were "providing full cooperation" with officials.

The automobile and industrial vehicle groups are suspected of having installed so-called "defeat devices" into their vehicles in order to illegally cheat on emissions tests.

Such devices make vehicles appear to spew fewer harmful pollutants in the lab than on the road.

Prosecutors suspect they may have been used in Iveco vehicles and those of Fiat Chrysler subsidiaries such as Alfa Romeo, Fiat and Jeep.

Wednesday's searches are the latest in a long string of probes into the auto industry following German giant Volkswagen's 2015 admission to cheating emissions tests on 11 million vehicles worldwide.

While Volkswagen have been at the centre of the scandal, other carmakers -- including Fiat Chrysler -- have also been implicated.

The American-Italian group agreed in January 2019 to pay a $515 million settlement in the US over charges it used defeat devices.

One of its senior managers was later charged with misleading US environmental regulators over the scandal.

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Bikes wedge their way into heavy Paris traffic
Paris (AFP) July 19, 2020
Stein van Oosteren was cycling along the Avenue Denfert Rochereau in Paris when, to his surprise, he found himself in a "caravan" of bikes. "Not too long ago, I was all alone on that street," he said. An avid cyclist and spokesman for the community-led biking advocacy organisation Collectif Velo Ile-de-France, van Oosteren has plenty of company these days. Since France emerged from its two-month lockdown in May, the number of cyclists in Paris has skyrocketed, increasing by more than 50 pe ... read more

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