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German union accuses Volkswagen of 'management errors' that put jobs at risks

FILE PHOTO: Hearing over VW diesel emissions cheating scandal, in Braunschweig

HAMBURG (Reuters) - Germany's biggest labour union criticised Volkswagen <VOWG_p.DE> on Thursday for a recent advert deemed racist and other "errors", saying management had damaged the carmaker's reputation and put jobs at risk.

The IG Metall union, in an open letter to the carmaker's management and supervisory boards, said it was shocked by the advert for Golf cars, calling it "one example of a whole chain of management errors".

Last week Volkswagen withdrew an advert posted on its official Instagram page for its Golf cars that it admitted was racist and insulting, saying it would investigate how it came about and draw consequences.

IG Metall, the main union for VW workers in Germany, also highlighted recent software problems that halted delivery of Volkswagen's Golf 8 model, saying it made "the disaster even worse!"

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"This poor public image destroys the customer confidence that has grown over decades and thus endangers our jobs. Moreover, the entire workforce suffers every day from the loss of our company's reputation," the union representatives wrote.

The management and supervisory boards declined to comment.

Volkswagen's reputation has been tarnished in the last five years after it admitted cheating diesel emissions tests.

(Reporting by Jan C. Schwartz; writing by Tom Sims, editing by Susan Fenton)