The 132 had limited manufacture outside Italy compared to its predecessor
125. The car was built in
Spain by
SEAT with
a version that was sold between 1973 and 1982. It was also assembled in South Africa by Fiat's local assemblers in
Rosslyn. After the 1977 update, the 132 was renamed "Elita" in South Africa, and due to a shortage of capacity at Fiat's plant it was assembled by competitors Alfa Romeo South Africa. The 132 was also assembled in
Yugoslavia by
Zastava, in
Zagreb. Cars arrived there practically fully completed, and there parts like wheels, battery, and also a plate which confirmed that car was assembled in Yugoslavia (under the name "Zastava 132"), were put. There weren't any differences from the Italian-built model. Assembly lasted from 1974 to 1983, and some 2,000–3,000 examples were built annually. Total 13.025 cars. It was particularly popular between directors and officials. The 132 was succeeded by
Fiat Argenta in Zastava's lineup. In Poland the 132 was offered from 1973 as the
Polski Fiat 132p. The car was described as "assembled by
FSO", though actually the cars were shipped from Italy almost complete. FSO only did the final assembly, fitting minor parts like wipers, batteries, seats, wheels and logos. The Polski Fiat 132p was a favourite with high state officials and
security services. For internal market it was available only for
hard currency in
Pewex stores.
Kia built 4,759 units of the 132 from
CKD kits in South Korea, from 1979. ==References==