The Phnom Penh Post

Spanish taxi drivers go on strike against Uber, Cabify

- Diego Urdaneta

THOUSANDS of Spanish taxis went on strike in Madrid and Barcelona yesterday to protest against companies that offer ride-hailing services such as Uber and Cabify.

In the seaside city of Barcelona, a draw for tourists, taxi drivers stopped work for a full 24 hours while those in the Spanish capital went on strike for 12 hours and protested in the streets.

At Madrid’s main Atocha train station, they let off firecracke­rs and shouted “taxis united, never defeated” while hapless travellers stood by.

Jara and her mother Isabel had just come back from a trip and were going to take public transport instead of a planned cab.

“It’s going to take one hour for a trip that would take 10 minutes in a taxi,” said Jara, adding she had used Uber before and criticisin­g taxis, which she said were “really expensive”.

Taxi drivers complain that services similar to Uber are endangerin­g their jobs and that ride-hailing companies are not implementi­ng existing rules.

Regulation­s stipulate there should be a quota of one licensed vehicle from companies like US-based Uber or Spain’s Cabify for every 30 taxis.

But taxis counter the quota is currently one for seven taxis, prompting Spain’s transport ministry to pledge to work towards implementi­ng the rule.

Sixteen-hour days

Uber does not employ drivers or own vehicles, but instead relies on private contractor­s with their own cars, allowing them to run their own businesses.

It claims it is a service provider, connecting passengers with these freelance drivers directly and cheaply.

But critics and competitor­s around the world say this allows it to dodge costly regulation­s such as stringent licensing requiremen­ts for taxi drivers, who undergo training that often takes hundreds of hours.

“We’re getting less business, and we have to work way more hours,” said David Parrilla, a protesting taxi driver who said he had paid 150,000 ($170,000) for a licence in Madrid, where there are some 15,700 taxis.

He added that he and his wife now take turns driving the cab 16 hours a day to make enough money.

Problems in Spain

Uber has had a tough ride in Spain, where it was forced out of the country in 2014 by legal pressure and taxi protests. A Spanish judge ruled in December 2014 that Uber risked breaking the law with its UberPop service that enabled unregulate­d drivers to drive for money using their own cars.

The US company is now operating a limited version of its UberX service that uses licensed, profession­al drivers instead of amateurs.

 ?? CURTO DE LA TORRE/AFP ?? A protester holds up a smoke canister as taxi drivers gather during a strike action, held between Atocha Train station to Neptuno Square in Madrid yesterday, against competitio­n from rival transport companies Uber and Cabify.
CURTO DE LA TORRE/AFP A protester holds up a smoke canister as taxi drivers gather during a strike action, held between Atocha Train station to Neptuno Square in Madrid yesterday, against competitio­n from rival transport companies Uber and Cabify.

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