On June 7, Kawasaki heavy industries, a Japanese manufacturing giant, held a press conference in which admitted that its subsidiaries had made a number of quality inspection frauds. The two frauds have lasted for 38 years since 1984** It is reported that the general manager of the involved subsidiary of Kawasaki heavy industries has been relieved of his post.
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It is understood that counterfeiting mainly includes: in the test run inspection before shipment, fabricating data that have not been measured at all out of thin air** And when the customer arrives at the site for inspection, the inspection standard can be reached by moving the measuring instrument. These two counterfeits have lasted for 38 years from 1984 to this year.
In addition, Kawasaki heavy industries also admitted that some commodities that have not obtained the Japanese industrial standard certification have been written as having obtained the certification in the product introduction, and this behavior has lasted for more than 20 years.
According to media reports, the relevant person in charge of Kawasaki heavy industry said that quality inspection fraud has no impact on product safety for the time being, and the relevant products have not been involved in the Chinese market**
It is worth noting that in recent years, a number of well-known enterprises in Japan have successively exposed fraud scandals, bringing "made in Japan" down the altar. Japan's famous enterprises, including Mitsubishi Electric, Takata, a Japanese airbag supplier, Kobe Steel, Kobayashi chemical, a Japanese pharmaceutical enterprise, and dawning brake industry, a Japanese auto parts supplier, have suffered setbacks.