Kuwait Times

Spanish taxis go on strike against Uber, Cabify

-

Thousands of Spanish taxis went on strike in Madrid and Barcelona yesterday to protest against ride-hailing companies 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 criticizin­g taxis, which she said were “really expensive”.

Taxi drivers complain that Uber-type services are endangerin­g their jobs and that ride-hailing companies are not implementi­ng existing rules. Spanish regulation­s stipulate there should be a quota of one licensed vehicle from companies like USbased 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.

16-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 hundreds of hours of training.

“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 euros ($170,000) for a license 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. 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 a version of its UberX service that uses licensed, profession­al drivers instead of amateurs. —AFP

 ??  ?? MADRID: A protestor holds up a smoke canister as taxi drivers march during a strike action held between Atocha Train station to Neptuno Square in Madrid yesterday against competitio­n from rival transport companies Uber and Cabify (Tourism Vehicle with...
MADRID: A protestor holds up a smoke canister as taxi drivers march during a strike action held between Atocha Train station to Neptuno Square in Madrid yesterday against competitio­n from rival transport companies Uber and Cabify (Tourism Vehicle with...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait