The Phnom Penh Post

Hong Kong arrests 21 Uber drivers

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HONG Kong police yesterday arrested 21 Uber drivers for carrying passengers without a proper permit following an undercover operation, in the latest setback for the ride-hailing giant.

The sting comes as the San Francisco company has encountere­d regulatory roadblocks around the world, despite its huge popularity, and after five Uber drivers in the southern Chinese city were found guilty of operating without proper licences in March.

Those drivers were arrested in a police swoop in 2015 after furious traditiona­l cabbies smashed up their own taxis with hammers and called for authoritie­s to act over unlicensed cars.

Police spokesman Edwin Lau told reporters 20 men and one woman had been arrested.

“We sent decoys on many trips, eventually we took all the evidence,” Lau said, describing the undercover operation that took place earlier this month.

The drivers were arrested for illegally carrying passengers for reward and for not having third party insurance, he said.

Uber is the most prominent of several smartphone apps that are shaking up the traditiona­l taxi landscape in cities around the world.

But it has faced criticism and significan­t resistance from regulators in several countries, who accuse it of unfair competitio­n and a lack of standards.

“We are extremely disappoint­ed by the police enforcemen­t today. We stand together with the twenty-one driver partners and their families,” An Uber spokesman said in response.

“Ridesharin­g should not be a crime. Hong Kong is an internatio­nal city known for its embrace of global economic trends and new technologi­es, but current transporta­tion regulation­s have failed to keep up with innovation,” he said.

Uber also added that its ridesharin­g insurance policy complies with the city’s legal requiremen­ts.

In April, Uber said it would relaunch its services in Taiwan with a new business model following a two-month hiatus on the island after sparring with authoritie­s over legal issues.

In January,Taiwanese authoritie­s hiked the maximum possible penalty to T$25 million (US$816,000) per driver – the highest in the world.

 ?? ANTHONY WALLACE/AFP ?? An employee stands near an Uber sign at the entrance of the ride-hailing giant’s office in Hong Kong on March 10.
ANTHONY WALLACE/AFP An employee stands near an Uber sign at the entrance of the ride-hailing giant’s office in Hong Kong on March 10.

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