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  • 25
    Apr
    2013
    1:49pm, EDT

    Car maker Hyundai apologizes for commercial showing attempted suicide

    A still frame of the Hyundai advertisement, for which the car maker has apologized.

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    South Korean car maker Hyundai apologized Thursday for a U.K. advertisement that depicts a man trying to commit suicide in his garage but failing because of his zero-emission car.

    The ad, apparently designed for circulation on the Internet, was created by advertising agency Innocean and came to attention when it was featured in a review in the media section of The Guardian newspaper.

    It shows an actor playing a man, intent on ending his life, starting his car in a closed garage – a common method of suicide in which death is caused by carbon monoxide poisoning from exhaust fumes.

    The next scene shows the man opening the garage door followed by the tagline: "The new iX35 with 100% water emissions."

    The company said it had withdrawn the commercial, although clips of it were still available on YouTube [readers may find the video disturbing].

    Ian Tonkin, a UK public relations manager with the Hyundai – the world’s fifth-largest car maker – issued a statement that said: "Hyundai understands that the video has caused offence. We apologize unreservedly. The video has been taken down and will not be used in any of our advertising or marketing."

    A woman who answered the telephone at Innocean's U.K. office said the company did not have any comment to make.

    Holly Brockwell, an advertising industry worker whose father took his life when she was young, posted an emotional open letter to Hyundai and Innocean on her blog, Copyblot.

    "As an advertising creative, I would like to congratulate you on achieving the visceral reaction we all hope for. On prompting me to share it on my Twitter page and my blog. I would not like to congratulate you on making me cry for my dad.

    My dad never drove a Hyundai. Thanks to you, neither will I."

    The evidence shows that this vile Hyundai suicide advert can put lives at risk. bit.ly/11UifVt

    — ben goldacre (@bengoldacre) April 25, 2013

    Science journalist Ben Goldacre described the advertisement as “almost surreally misguided.”

    It was not immediately clear how widely the ad, which has the title “Pipe Job," was ever circulated by Hyundai.

     

    131 comments

    freedom of expression? or common sense should prevail! I will go with 'common sense'. Sometimes people just use 'freedom of expression' to show what a jackass (or a pig?) they are. Sure you have that freedom; we also have the freedom to laugh or even the freedom to refuse to socialize with you.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: media, world, car, suicide, internet, marketing, hyundai, emissions, commercial, featured
  • 16
    Nov
    2012
    11:07am, EST

    'Quite surprised': Cops pull over speeding autobahn driver, discover mobile office

    Saarland State Police via AP

    When German police pulled over a driver on the autobahn on Monday, they discovered his vehicle was wired up like a mobile office.

    By Andy Eckardt, NBC News

    MAINZ, Germany -- Ever worry about getting caught by police using your cellphone while driving?

    That was not enough of a risk for one German driver, who had an entire office installed in his FORD Mondeo station wagon.

    Undercover highway police in southern Germany on Monday pulled over a 34-year-old IT specialist after he conducted an illegal passing maneuver and was going 80 miles per hour in a reduced 62-mile-per-hour zone on Germany's infamous super highway, the autobahn.

    Read more World news stories on NBCNews.com


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "The officers were quite surprised when they found a laptop, a printer and even a medium-size voltage transformer attached to a wood rack that was set up next to the center console," police spokesman Stephan Lassotta told NBC News.

    In addition, the German highway patrol found two cellphones and a navigation system installed in the windshield of the driver's car.

    "We could not prove that the driver had been using the equipment while driving, so he was not fined for that violation," Lassotta added.

    Crazy gas prices driving German consumers mad

    But the man, who was not identified by name, was asked to store the technical equipment in his trunk immediately, before being allowed to continue his journey. German law states that "unsecured items" in vehicles are dangerous and therefore not permitted.

    The man now faces a fine of more than $170 for speeding and passing traffic in a right-hand lane, in accordance with German law.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Wake-up call for Israel's city that never sleeps
    • Cops pull over speeding driver, discover mobile office
    • Analysis: Israel strikes old foe amid new realities of Arab Spring
    • Images: Stuck behind the scenes as China changes leaders
    • As Taliban regroup, victims battle for 'free' Afghanistan
    • Analysis: Israel, Gaza slide closer to a war neither side wants
    • New 'intelligence' body set to fight trade in world's treasures
    • Understanding the beauty of Indonesia's 'Underwater Eden'
    • Israel, Hamas take conflict to Twitter

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    96 comments

    The cops should talk--they have been driving around with mobile offices for decades now!!!!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, car, police, driver, featured, autobahn, mobile-office
  • 27
    Aug
    2012
    9:52am, EDT

    Japan protests after man seizes flag from ambassador's car in Beijing

    By Reuters

    Updated 10:15 a.m. ET: BEIJING -- A man ripped a Japanese flag from a car carrying Japan's ambassador in Beijing on Monday, triggering a protest from Tokyo in the latest flare-up of a territorial row that provoked the worst anti-Japanese protests in years.

    The Japanese embassy issued a statement saying the ambassador, Uichiro Niwa, was unhurt in the incident. It said two other vehicles forced his car to stop and a man got out, broke off the Japanese flag and ran off with it.


    But Japan's Foreign Ministry later said the flag had been snatched after the ambassador's car had become stuck in a traffic jam. A ministry spokesman said it would be too strong to describe the incident as an attack.

    Both Japanese accounts said no one was injured and the car was otherwise undamaged.

    Much at stake for US as tensions rise in troubled China Seas

    The embassy said it had "filed a strong protest with the Chinese Foreign Ministry." It said that in response a senior ministry official called the incident "extremely regrettable" and pledged efforts to ensure the safety of Japanese citizens and businesses in China.

    The incident occurred amid heightened tensions over disputed islands since mid-August, when the Japanese coast guard detained Chinese activists who sailed from Hong Kong and landed on the islands. Anti-Japanese demonstrations have taken place in Chinese cities over the past two weekends.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Disputed islands
    The uninhabited islands known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China have long been a source of friction between Tokyo and Beijing and competing territorial claims to the islets and surrounding fishing areas and potentially rich gas deposits.

    Tokyo also remains locked in a dispute with South Korea over another contested island chain.

    In a symbolic, but rare gesture the Japanese parliament on Friday passed two resolutions asserting Japan's sovereignty over both island chains, calling Seoul's control over one of them a "illegal occupation" that should end soon.

    The resolutions prompted rebukes from Seoul and Beijing.

    Japanese nationalists land on island claimed by China

    But in an effort to avert a further flare-up, the Japanese government on Monday refused to let Tokyo metropolitan authorities land on the islands claimed by Japan and China.

    Tokyo Governor Shintaro Ishihara has proposed buying the islands from their private Japanese owners and has sought permission to send a team of officials to survey the land.

    Despite close economic ties, bitter memories of Japanese militarism run deep in China and South Korea. The territorial disputes show how the region has failed to resolve differences nearly seven decades after the end of World War Two.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • 17 beheaded after 'music party' in Afghanistan
    • Botched restoration turns Spanish church into tourist attraction
    • Afghan sources: Top Haqqani commander killed
    • Bulldozer wrecks Sufi mosque and graves in Libya sectarian attack
    • Dozens killed, hurt in Venezuela oil refinery explosion
    • Syria VP Al-Sharaa appears in public, ending defection rumor

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    57 comments

    Remember,the rape of Nanking,Japanese using Chinese people as test subjects for biological warfare experiments? Maybe the Chinese are right to mistrust the Japanese!! The Japanese people still will not admit that any of this happened.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: japan, china, car, dispute, ambassador, diplomat, asia-pacific
  • 6
    Aug
    2012
    6:31am, EDT

    Fastest way to get to London's Olympic Park? Car, train, taxi, bus and bicycle compete

    Traveling around traffic-plagued London can be a hassle at the best of times -- never mind during an event such as the Olympic Games. NBCNews.com put the city to the test in a race to the Olympic Park.

    By NBC News staff

    LONDON -- For months, London has been gripped by fear of transport gridlock during the Olympics. So NBC News decided to find out just what was the best way to get about the city, notorious for its near stationary traffic and packed, sweltering subway trains.

    We chose five different methods of travel: car, train, taxi, the city’s famous red double-decker buses and bicycle.


    Our mission was to travel from Piccadilly Circus in central London to the Olympic Park in Stratford, East London.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    At noon last Monday local time, the five of us set off with video cameras to record our attempts to make it in time for the men’s 10-meter synchronized diving at 3 p.m.

    For some it was a simple, pleasant journey. For others, it was an experience to forget.

    Here are our stories:

    Car driver Peter Jeary: ‘You’ll never get parked’
    To be honest, no one in their right mind would drive from central London to Stratford even on the best of days -- let alone during the Olympics. It was, however, much less stressful than expected.  

    The pinch point around Trafalgar Square is always bad; it took me about 20 minutes to travel half a mile. The Olympic Lane [for athletes, officials] was often tantalizingly empty as I sat nose-to-tail in traffic.

    Evangelists, 'vegan turkey' seek converts at London Olympics

    One moment of crisis was when a London cab (naturally!) decided to drop a passenger in the only lane open to traffic. Could I sneak past, with just two wheels in the Olympic Lane? As the cars in front did, I decided to as well. Time will tell if I get a £130 fine ($203) in the mail.

    Finding somewhere to park was a nightmare. In the interests of full disclosure -- I parked in a timed zone that would have expired just as the first competitors touched the water. So even if you do try driving -- don't! You'll never get parked.

    Time: One hour 30 minutes

    Slideshow: Venues for 2012 London Olympic Games

    Oda / Getty Images

    From Wimbledon to Wembley Stadium to The Dome, a look at the venues for the 2012 London Olympic Games.

    Launch slideshow

    Cyclist Jim Seida: ‘No better way’
    On a warm, sunny day, there is no better way to navigate the streets of London than on a bicycle.

    As you pedal the tangled web that is central London, the sounds of languages and smells of foods from around the world become part of your point A to point B experience, making it just that, an experience, a journey, and any moment on the bike becomes about that journey, not just time passing by on your way to your destination.   

    For this trip, though, from Piccadilly Circus to Stratford, trying to focus on where to go and when to turn impacted my usual enjoyment of the international experience I've come to enjoy over the past week. 

    Home advantage: Britain celebrates 'sensational' Olympic medal haul

    Sure, I still got to squeeze between double-decker buses with only inches to spare, and I got to dodge pedestrians as they crossed against the light, but doing these things one handed on a bicycle while trying to navigate via an iPhone with the other is, well, a bit awesome. 

    There is no better way to go.  If we had to do it all over again, I'd still take a bike; and I think if we did it during rush hour I'd smoke 'em all. 

    Time: 48 minutes

    An actor from gangster movie "Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels" is giving walking tours of old underworld haunts in East London, where this month's Olympic Games are being held. NBC's Theresa Cook reports.

    Taxi passenger Ian Johnston: ‘It seemed like I’d won’
    It took me about 20 seconds to find one of London’s famous black taxi cabs after the five of us separated in Piccadilly Circus. 

    My driver, Steve, a cabbie of 19 years’ experience and a native Londoner, was great, regaling me with stories about the time he had actor Roger Moore, rock star Noel Gallagher and other celebrities in his taxi while performing neat u-turns and avoiding traffic effectively by using side streets.

    We hit a bit of traffic initially but then caught Jim Seida as he stood at the side of the road looking a bit puzzled about which direction to go. Jim slipped away again through the traffic, but soon Steve found roads that were really quiet for London and we started making good progress. I started to feel confident.

    In order to drive a cab in London, drivers undergo intense training and classes before getting behind the wheel. TODAY's Lester Holt reports.

    Olympics bring pride, hope to Afghanistan

    Alastair Jamieson sent a text saying he was about to board one of the speedy Javelin trains to the Olympic Park, but moments later we saw our first glimpse of our target destination. It was definitely going to be close.

    As we got to the venue, police stopped Steve from parking in what seemed to be a good dropping-off point and directed him to the taxi rank, wasting a few vital minutes. I thanked Steve profusely, paid the $43 bill and dodged through the crowds at a fast walk. I arrived at the entrance and couldn’t see any of the others. It seemed like I’d won, then I spotted Alastair standing at another entrance. He'd come from a different direction, so I went across to ask when he'd arrived.

    Time: 43 minutes

    Slideshow: When the Olympics is your neighbor

    /

    A diverse community in East London will welcome the world to Britain for the 2012 Olympic Games. Meet residents and hear how they feel about having a huge, world stage in their backyard.

    Launch slideshow

    Bus passenger Jamieson Lesko: Faster if I’d ran
    I've never been a bus rider, so at the start of this journey, I wondered if I've been underestimating the ‘Big Reds’ all this time. But unfortunately, it turns out that I've not been too hard on them. Double decker = double time.  

    It took me one minute shy of two hours to get from Piccadilly Circus to Stratford.

    Olympic hosts: Londoners open their homes to the world

    If I've done my math correctly, it would have been a faster trip if I'd jogged the whole way!

    For visitors to London, the benefit of the bus is that you get a comfortable seat and scenic tour of the many sites there are to enjoy… but, if you've got a ticket for the Games or are on any kind of schedule, take the tube, grab a cab, or put on your sneakers and hoof it over to the venue!

    Time: One hour 59 minutes

    Slideshow: Graffiti Games: UK street artists take on Olympics

    Jim Seida / NBC News

    Street and graffiti artists have been satirizing, celebrating and making jokes about the Olympic Games in London.

    Launch slideshow

    And the winner is: train passenger Alastair Jamieson
    The official London 2012 website journey planner said public transport, using a combination of tube train and high-speed rail link, would be the fastest route for our trip. 

    And so it proved -- but only just.

    My trip took 42 minutes --  five minutes under the website's estimate -- but was almost beaten by the cab.

    London's underground system, whose oldest section dates from 1863, when Abraham Lincoln was president, was an immediate concern for Games organizers.

    Medals for poets? Not at this Olympics but...

    To ease pressure on the narrow tunnels, a shuttle service of Japanese-built 140mph "Javelin" trains was introduced on the fast line between London and Paris which runs underneath the Olympic Park. Running every 15 minutes, it slashed our journey time by a remarkable 21 minutes.

    Despite concerns about crowding, my journey on the Piccadilly line to the King's Cross terminus station was hassle-free and, like the games venues, had plenty of free seats.

    Changing trains took five minutes, and there were elevators available for those unable to tackle the large number of steps.

    More London 2012 coverage from NBCNews.com

    At Stratford's International station, it was only a six-minute walk to Stratford Gate, well-signed by volunteers in purple vests.

    And even better than being the fastest route, it was the cheapest -- free to anyone with an automated Oyster swipe card, including ticket-holders.

    NBC News' Peter Jeary, Jim Seida, Ian Johnston, Jamieson Lesko, Alastair Jamieson, Barny Smith and Kristy Breetzke contributed to this report.

    Slideshow: Olympic Emotional Moments

    /

    Click for more from the 2012 summer games in London.

    Launch slideshow

    9 comments

    Yeah, experiments were conducted about 25 years ago and it was found that the fastest way around London was on a moped. You just got really miserable in the rain!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: travel, olympics, car, london, taxi, bus, train, traffic, bicycle, uk, featured
  • 24
    May
    2012
    7:02am, EDT

    Report: China couple bury car crash victim alive, thinking she was dead

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Chinese police have arrested a young couple who buried an old woman alive in the mistaken belief she was dead after their car hit the 68-year-old, according to a report.

    The couple, who had been at an all-night karaoke session, hit the woman while driving at night in the eastern province of Zhejiang last month, the official China Daily newspaper said.


    "A witness said he heard someone crying and saw an elderly woman lying on the ground near (the car)," it cited a police officer as saying. "A man and a woman got out and put the elderly woman in the car, saying they would send her to hospital."

    But, worried about being arrested for drunk driving and causing the accident and believing she was no longer alive, they buried her near the side of the road, the report added.

    However, when police later found the woman's body they discovered she had still been alive when she was buried, and had then suffocated to death, the paper said.

    "It's certain the woman was not dead when buried," a public security bureau official told China Daily on Wednesday. "Legal medical experts detected particles identical to those in the surrounding soil in her lungs, which indicates she was still breathing."

    However he added police were still investigating the circumstances of the case. "Preliminary judgment of the cause of death is brain injury by the impact from the car and asphyxia," he said.

    The story has been widely discussed on China's popular Twitter-like service Weibo, where it has ignited uproar for what some called the immorality of modern Chinese society.

    Read more on China from NBC News in Behind the Wall

    "Such things show that our society really has huge problems it is not facing," wrote one user.

    "People of China, how have you come to this?" wrote another.

    Boy, 3, rides toy motorcycle through China city, trying to find his mom

    China's economic boom and the growing disparity between the rich and poor have made changing social values a contentious topic, with some lamenting what they see as materialism and a get-rich-quick attitude replacing public morals.

    China state TV host's rant: 'Clean out foreign trash'

    Last year, graphic video footage of a two-year-old child run over by a van and ignored by passersby in southern China sparked similar anger.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Aid workers targeted amid new Pakistan crisis
    • Jubilee treat: Canadian Mounties guard UK's queen
    • Africa's Rainbow Nation troubled by racist time warp
    • 'Nearly empty': A rare glimpse inside Syria rebel stronghold
    • Terror suspect's eye color? UK's flying cameras know
    • Analysis: How Egypt's election can transform the Middle East

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    111 comments

    Just goes to show that people all over the world are cold and callous. I feel our species is doomed.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, crash, car, featured, buried-alive, zhejiang
  • 7
    Feb
    2012
    10:11am, EST

    Deadliest crash in years kills 11 in Canada

    By msnbc.com and news services

    HAMPSTEAD, Ontario -- Ten migrant farm workers from Peru were killed when a flat bed hit a passenger van in rural Canada on Monday afternoon, police and the workers' employer said. The truck driver also was killed.

    Three other passengers were critically injured, The Globe and Mail reported.


    The crash, the deadliest in Ontario since 1999,  will leave at least 10 families in another country without a breadwinner, according to the Globe and Mail.

    20 years for driver in DUI crash that killed nun

    Police said one survivor was airlifted to a hospital with life-threatening injuries, and two others were seriously injured.

    "On behalf of 13 million Ontarians, I want to offer our deepest condolences to those who lost a loved one and to offer our most sincere prayers for those taken to hospital," Premier Dalton McGuinty said in a statement.

    No names of the victims have been released. Albert Burgers, who owns the farm where the workers were Monday before the crash, said some had been with his crew for more than 10 years.

    Police told the CEO of the truck company, Speedy Transport, that the van apparently went through a stop sign and was hit by the truck.

    911 calls released after horrific Fla. pileup

    The impact sent the van hurtling across a lawn before smashing into a house. The van's passenger side was nearly ripped off.

    "I've been on the job for 28 years and I’ve never seen anything like it," Inspector Steve Porter told the newspaper as he stood near the scene after dark.

    Msnbc.com staff and The Associated contributed to this report.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • US shutters embassy in Syria, withdraws all personnel
    • 'Death to Christians': Suspected Jewish extremists deface monastery
    • US levies new sanctions on Iran's Central Bank
    • Israel PM: Palestinian reconciliation deal abandons 'way of peace'
    • 3 dead, dozens missing after blast at Pakistan factory
    • US tour guide recounts kidnapping in Egypt
    • Anti-Putin protesters: Bitter cold and big questions

     

    21 comments

    Reading the article it says nothing about anybody not being able to "speak the language and read road signs". English-speaking Americans run stop signs and kill people everyday (drinking and driving, texting, etc.). Don't be so quick to judge.

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    Explore related topics: canada, farm, peru, crash, car, workers, migrant, featured
  • 29
    Dec
    2011
    7:56am, EST

    Australian woman survives 3 days trapped upside-down in crashed car

    Ambulance Service Of NSW/Handout / EPA

    Debbie McKnight was trapped for three days in her car after the vehicle plunged down an embankment on Christmas Day in Tumut, Australia.

    By msnbc.com staff

    A woman who crashed her car on Christmas Day survived for three days with her leg pinned in the wreckage after it plunged down an embankment in southern Australia, according to local reports.

    Debbie McKnight, 45, was driving home from her daughter's house in Tumut, New South Wales, when she swerved to avoid a kangaroo and the vehicle left the road. Her car flipped and landed on its roof 26 feet below, The Sydney Morning Herald reported.


    Teenager Caleb Wilks found her late Wednesday when he walked past the wreck and heard her screaming for help, Sky News Australia reported.

    "Otherwise we wouldn't have found her," Sergeant Brian Hammond told Sky.

    'She was so desperate'
    McKnight was flown to Canberra Hospital where surgeons amputated her leg. She was listed in stable condition.

    "She was so desperate she was actually going to cut off her leg herself but she couldn't find anything sharp enough," Hammond said.

    Ambulance Service Of NSW/Handout / EPA

    Paramedics at the scene of the crash in Tumut, Australia.

    The Ambulance Service of New South Wales said the pressure from the car on her leg likely acted as a tourniquet and stopped any life-threatening bleeding.

    Tumut's mayor John Larter told the Sydney Morning Herald that McKnight was fortunate to have survived.

    "As anyone would be in a vehicle lying upside-down for three days over Christmas, I imagine anyone would have been distressed," Larter said. "You'd be missing your family over Christmas and I suppose you'd be wondering when somebody was going to come and rescue you." 

     

    75 comments

    Next time just hit the kangaroo.

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    Explore related topics: crash, car, australia, asia-pacific, christmas, featured, survival
  • 27
    Dec
    2011
    9:16am, EST

    Honda begins scrapping over 1000 cars damaged from Thailand floods

    Athit Perawongmetha / Reuters

    Vehicles are seen after floodwaters receded at the Honda factory in Ayutthaya province on Nov. 26. Thailand's worst floods in 50 years have killed 610 people and devastated industry, but the situation is slowly improving, with water receding in many affected areas.

    Apichart Weerawong / AP

    Workers walk amidst Honda cars that were damaged by the flood before the destruction demonstration at Honda automobile plant in Ayutthaya province, central Thailand on Dec. 27. The 1,055 unit of Honda cars, mostly Brio eco-cars and City subcompacts, were destroyed in an action to assure to customers that the flood-damaged cars will not be repaired and sold.

    By Natalia Jimenez, NBC News

    In an effort to prove that no flood damaged vehicles will be sold to customers, the Honda factory in Thailand's Ayutthaya province began destroying over 1,000 cars. The factory was one of the hardest hit by the several months of record flooding, which only receded a few weeks ago. The devastating floods were the worst the country experienced in 50 years and left over 700 people dead. According to AFP, the scrapping process is expected to take one month.

    Honda's production was disrupted from the floods and only recently returned to normal. According to AP, American Honda Executive Vice President John Mendel says it will not be until March that dealers will be fully restocked.

    Aerial images of the submerged cars in the Honda lot provided powerful visuals of the effects of the severe flooding on businesses. (One of the images made it into our selection of the Year in Pictures: 2011.) The area is home to large production centers for global car and computer industries. According to Bloomberg, Toyota had to suspend local production of its Camry and Prius lines, and Apple faced delays in parts used for Mac computers. Western Digital shares hit a year low in October and is now working to regain their losses, according to Reuters.

    See more images of the severe flooding in Thailand on PhotoBlog.

    Pornchai Kittiwongsakul / AFP - Getty Images

    A Honda worker lifts a flood damaged car at the Honda factory in Ayutthaya province on December 27, 2011. Japanese car assembler Honda automobile (Thailand) started to scrap 1,055 cars which were damaged by the recent floods in Thailand, ensuring that damaged parts would not be sold, the company said in statement.

    Pornchai Kittiwongsakul / AFP - Getty Images

    A flood damaged Honda car is destroyed at the Honda factory in Ayutthaya province on Dec 27. Japanese car assembler Honda automobile (Thailand) started to scrap 1,055 cars which were damaged by the recent floods in Thailand, ensuring that damaged parts would not be sold, the company said in statement.

    28 comments

    We hear of flood damaged cars in the U.S. being "cleaned up" and shipped hundreds of miles to unsuspecting buyers who then inherit a "flood" of continuing problems needing repair. Fortunately, Honda chose to do the morally right thing and scrap the cars instead of pawining them off on someone. Good  …

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    Explore related topics: thailand, honda, car, flood, world-news, buisness
  • 5
    Dec
    2011
    12:12am, EST

    Gone in less than 60 seconds: 11 luxury sports cars wrecked in expensive pileup

    The Associated Press reports from TOKYO:

     An outing of luxury sportscar enthusiasts in Japan ended in an expensive freeway pileup — smashing a stunning eight Ferraris, a Lamborghini and two Mercedes likely worth more than $1 million together.

    Kyodo News via Reuters

    Police officers investigate wrecked luxury cars at the site of a traffic accident in Shimonoseki on Dec. 4, 2011.

    Yomiuri Shimbun via AFP - Getty Images

    Damaged Ferrari sports cars along a stretch of the Chugoku highway following a 14-vehicle pile-up on Dec. 4, 2011.

    Police say they believe the accident Sunday was touched off when the driver of one of the Ferraris tried to change lanes and hit the median barrier. He spun across the freeway, and the other cars collided while trying to avoid hitting his car.

    Video of the crash aired by NTV, a major national network, showed several smashed, bright red Ferraris cluttering the freeway.

    No one was seriously injured, but police in Yamaguchi prefecture said 10 people were treated for bruises and cuts. Police say 14 cars were involved altogether. Read the full story.

    AP

    Police officers investigate damaged Ferrari cars at the site of a traffic accident on the Chugoku Expressway in Shimonoseki, Japan, Dec. 4. Thirteen sports cars, including eight Ferraris, a Lamborghini and two Mercedes-Benz, were involved in the accident, slightly injuring 10 people.

    Kyodo News / AP

    Police officers investigate damaged luxury cars at the site of a traffic accident on the Chugoku Expressway in Shimonoseki, Japan, Dec. 4.

    Traffic police spokesman Mitsuyoshi Isejima called the event "a gathering of narcissists," according to Bloomberg.  He said the drivers were aged between 37 and 60 years old.

    A highway in Japan is littered with smashed luxury cars and their parts after eight Ferraris, two Mercedes and a Lamborghini collide en route to a car show. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Related content: Even the crashes are stylish - Million-dollar wreck in Monaco.

     

    448 comments

    It seems as though there is a lot of class envy out there. If you got the money, have fun, because one day you might not have your health or the money to live like you can today. Fast cars are made to go fast and rules are made to be broken.

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    Explore related topics: japan, asia, accident, car, world-news, automobile, ferrari, featured, luxury

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Natalia Jimenez

Natalia Jimenez is a multimedia editor at NBCNews.com. She was previously a photo editor at the Star-Ledger in Newark, N.J.

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