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The company is already in the middle of a global recall of 4.5 million other vehicles over defective gas pedals and floor mats that could cause unintended acceleration. Those problems and criticism of Toyota's response to them have sullied the stellar reputation for quality long enjoyed by the world's biggest automaker.
Toyota decided on a separate recall in Japan on Saturday covering its latest Prius model and has notified dealers, Japan's largest newspaper, the Yomiuri, reported without naming sources. It said Toyota would announce the move early this week after consulting with the Japanese government. Japan's Kyodo News agency and TV Asahi carried similar reports. Kyodo said at least 170,000 vehicles in Japan would be subject to the recall.
Toyota, which said last week it was still deciding what to do about the Prius and that a recall was an option, did not confirm the Yomiuri report.
"We will make an announcement soon on the action we plan to take," spokeswoman Ririko Takeuchi said Sunday.
A phone call to the section at Japan's transport ministry dealing with recalls went unanswered Sunday morning.
Separately, Bob Carter, a Toyota group vice president, sent an e-mail message Friday night to US dealers saying the automaker is working on a Prius repair plan and will disclose more details early this week. At least 100 drivers of Prius cars in the US have complained to the government that their brakes seemed to fail momentarily when they were driving on bumpy roads. The government says the problem is suspected in four crashes and two minor injuries.
Public awareness of the problem "has prompted considerable customer concern, speculation, and media attention due to the significance of the Prius image," Carter said in the e-mail. "We want to assure our dealers that we are moving rapidly to provide a solution for your existing customers."
Besides a full-fledged safety recall, the company could simply ask owners to bring their vehicles in for repairs, since the brakes are not failing completely. The lag occurs as the car switches between brakes for the gas engine and the electric motor -- a process that is key to the hybrid's increased mileage.
Toyota has acknowledged receiving dozens of complaints about the Prius in Japan.
There is high-level government concern in Japan about Toyota's quality problems. Cabinet ministers have expressed alarm and urged the company to move more quickly to ease consumer worries.
Media criticism of Toyota has intensified since a news conference on Friday by Toyota President Akio Toyoda in which he offered an apology for the defects but few details about what the automaker would do about the Prius.