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Honda Launches Preventive Campaign to
Replace Airbags in 25,000 CR vehicles
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QCOSTARICA – Honda, through its distributor FACO in Costa Rica, is launching a campaign to replace airbag inflators located in the driver’s and passenger’s seats of certain vehicles from 1996 to 2016.
This is due to the potential for them to deploy incorrectly and cause serious injury.
To ensure everyone’s safety, Honda is organizing a free repair marathon, “reparatón”, from 8 am to 5 pm next Thursday to Sunday (May 25 to May 28) at the National Stadium in La Sabana.
Customers can check the VIN number at www. hondacostarica.com/seguridad-productos, by email at servicioalcliente@hondafaco.com or calling customer service at (506) 2010-4100, to see if their vehicle needs to be serviced.
Honda-trained technicians will make the changes. The process takes around 45 minutes, with recreational spaces set up to make waiting pleasant. Refreshments and waiting places will be provided.
“For the second year in a row, we urge Honda vehicle owners to attend this call, verifying if their vehicle qualifies within the category that must make the change in order to always prioritize the safety of all its passengers, the service will be without an appointment. and 100% free,” stated Francisco Castro, Marketing Director of Honda Costa Rica.
QCOSTARICA – The ámara de Infocomunicación y Tecnología (Infocom) – Chamber of Infocommunication and Technology, makes a respectful, but at the same time vehement, call on the government to maintain the efforts that have sustained the success achieved by Costa Rica at the level of attracting foreign investment, in the midst of uncertainty that has generated the dissolution of the agreement with the Coalición Costarricense de Iniciativas de Desarrollo (CINDE) – Costa Rican Coalition of Development Initiatives.
La Babana Sur, on the west side of San JoseInfocom recognizes the role and trajectory of the apolitical, non-profit agency CINDE in the last 40 years, since the results in terms of attracting foreign direct investment to the country, generating employment and creating value for Costa Rica are evident; thanks to the support of more than 400 multinationals that have generated at least 180,000 direct jobs for Costa Ricans, without considering the contribution in terms of indirect and formal jobs.
Read more: Government of Rodrigo Chaves breaks the agreement with CINDE
According to data from the Coalition, Costa Rica is a knowledge-intensive economy, which exports twice as many services as the average for countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), and is home to 16 of the top 100 companies of technology worldwide.