Mercedes-Benz will extend a voluntary recall to more than three million diesel vehicles AFP/Tobias SCHWARZ |
A statement issued by the carmaker owned by German giant Daimler said the situation was not related to the airbags crisis at Japanese group Takata.
Mercedes said it was recalling models -- the A, B, C, and E-Class as well as the CLA, GLA, and GLC -- built between November 2011 and July 2017.
The statement did not specify how many cars would be recalled, but the company later confirmed 400,000 vehicles were concerned.
Mercedes said the driver airbag warning light and red airbag warning lamp could be displayed by error.
It added that "in rare circumstances" a vehicle "could inadvertently deploy the driver?s airbag".
The car manufacturer said affected customers would be contacted about having their car recalled and repaired.
"The fix takes around one hour and the work will be performed free of charge. This is not related to any Takata recall," it added.
Takata has recalled some 100 million airbags produced for some of the world's largest automakers, including about 70 million in the United States, because of the risk that they could improperly inflate and rupture, potentially firing deadly shrapnel at the vehicle's occupants.
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