• The VW supervisory board member Wolfgang Porsche (L) and Lower-Saxony state governor Stephan Weil (R) at VW's AGM held at the Deutsche Messe AG Exhibition Grounds in Hanover, Germany. Peter Steffen/EPA
    The VW supervisory board member Wolfgang Porsche (L) and Lower-Saxony state governor Stephan Weil (R) at VW's AGM held at the Deutsche Messe AG Exhibition Grounds in Hanover, Germany. Peter Steffen/EPA
  • A worker cleans the floor around a Volkswagen multivan on display during the German car maker's annual general meeting in Hanover. The emissions cheating scandal has plunged the group into an unprecedented crisis. John MacDougal/AFP
    A worker cleans the floor around a Volkswagen multivan on display during the German car maker's annual general meeting in Hanover. The emissions cheating scandal has plunged the group into an unprecedented crisis. John MacDougal/AFP
  • Mr Mueller apologises at the VW AGM. Sebastian Gollnow/EPA
    Mr Mueller apologises at the VW AGM. Sebastian Gollnow/EPA
  • (L-R) The VW board member Frank Witter, Mr Mueller and the chairman Hans Dieter Poetsch at VW's AGM . John MacDougal/AFP
    (L-R) The VW board member Frank Witter, Mr Mueller and the chairman Hans Dieter Poetsch at VW's AGM . John MacDougal/AFP
  • Shareholders look at cars on show at the annual general meeting of Volkswagen in Hannover. Peter Steffen/AP
    Shareholders look at cars on show at the annual general meeting of Volkswagen in Hannover. Peter Steffen/AP
  • The VW board member Karlheinz Blessing (L) speaks withMr Mueller at the VW AGM. John MacDougal/AFP
    The VW board member Karlheinz Blessing (L) speaks withMr Mueller at the VW AGM. John MacDougal/AFP
  • Louise Kiesling, the niece of Ferdinand Piech (not pictured), arrives at the AGM. German state prosecutors have launched an investigation into the former VW head Martin Winterkorn over charges he withheld information about the growing scandal, effectively manipulating financial markets. Alexander Koerner/Getty Images
    Louise Kiesling, the niece of Ferdinand Piech (not pictured), arrives at the AGM. German state prosecutors have launched an investigation into the former VW head Martin Winterkorn over charges he withheld information about the growing scandal, effectively manipulating financial markets. Alexander Koerner/Getty Images
  • A Volkswagen Tiguan on display during the AGM. John MacDougal/AFP
    A Volkswagen Tiguan on display during the AGM. John MacDougal/AFP
  • A worker polishes a Volkswagen multivan on display during Volkswagen's annual general meeting in Hanover. John MacDougal/AFP
    A worker polishes a Volkswagen multivan on display during Volkswagen's annual general meeting in Hanover. John MacDougal/AFP
  • Volkswagen shareholders view a Lamborghini Huracan at the VW AGM. Fabian Bimmer/Reuters
    Volkswagen shareholders view a Lamborghini Huracan at the VW AGM. Fabian Bimmer/Reuters
  • A Volkswagen Tiguan on display at the AGM in Hanover. John MacDougal/AFP
    A Volkswagen Tiguan on display at the AGM in Hanover. John MacDougal/AFP

VW chiefs forced to say sorry amid investors’ fury at first AGM since diesel scandal broke


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Volkswagen executives apologised for the diesel emissions scandal to try to placate angry shareholders at a meeting on Wednesday and pledged change to haul the car maker out of its worst business crisis.

Europe’s largest car maker was holding its first annual shareholders meeting since admitting in September to cheating US diesel emissions tests in a scandal that risks costing the company tens of billions of dollars.

“We sincerely regret that the diesel issue is casting a shadow on this great company,” the chairman Hans Dieter Poetsch told the meeting in Hanover.

“It is all the more painful, for you, for us, and for me personally that rules were broken and ethical boundaries transgressed,” the chief executive Matthias Mueller told the meeting of about 3,000 shareholders.

Shareholders have strongly criticised a recommendation by VW’s supervisory and management boards to ratify the actions of executives in 2015 at the meeting, a common move at German companies, which amounts to a symbolic vote of confidence.

Shareholders demanded that Mr Poetsch, VW’s former finance chief, be replaced as the chairman of the meeting which is expected to run into the late evening, but the motion was voted down.

“We are looking at a shambles,” said Ulrich Hocker of Germany’s DSW association of private investors, saying the decision to rig the emissions tests was a “collective failure” by the nine-member management board.

VW’s supervisory and management boards recommended last month that shareholders endorse the former top management board, because an investigation into the scandal had until then failed to uncover potential wrongdoing by senior managers.

But prosecutors in Braunschweig near VW’s Wolfsburg headquarters are now investigating the former chief executive Martin Winterkorn and the VW brand chief Herbert Diess over whether they effectively manipulated markets by delaying the release of information about the test cheating.

A source told Reuters on Tuesday VW’s supervisory board has chosen to back the previous recommendation because internal investigations so far have shown that no former management board member was in serious breach of duties in 2015.

Mr Diess, the former BMW development chief hired last July to turn around the troubled VW brand, has the backing of the supervisory board despite the inquiry, the person said.

VW declined to comment.

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