Kuwait Times

Erdogan says Uber ‘finished’ in Turkey

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ISTANBUL: President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the ride hailing app Uber is “finished” in Turkey, following intense pressure from Istanbul taxi drivers for the service to be banned. Erdogan’s comments, in a late night speech Friday in Istanbul, came after the government agreed new rules that are expected to severely complicate Uber’s operations in Turkey.

Drivers of Istanbul’s yellow taxis have over the last months waged an intense campaign to have Uber banned, saying the company is eating into their business without having a proper legal basis for work. “This thing emerged called Uber or Muber or whatever,” said Erdogan. “But this issue is now finished. It’s over now.” “Our Prime Minister (Binali Yildirim) made the announceme­nt. We have our system of taxis,” he added.

Yildirim’s government last month issued a directive sharply hiking fines and threatened blacklisti­ng for companies whose vehicles illegally work as taxis. The official taxi drivers associatio­n said at the time the measure would be a major threat to Uber, if it was properly enforced by the traffic police. Erdogan said that while Uber may be popular in some European countries, Turkey was different. “Why did it (Uber) emerge? Because it was in Europe. But what is Europe to me? We will take the decision ourselves.”

His comments come three weeks ahead of keenly-contested presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections. Many Istanbul taxi drivers-though not all-are strong Erdogan supporters and the main taxi associatio­ns back him. The 17,400 official yellow taxis in Istanbul are a pillar of the city’s often patchy transport system, but critics say that poor quality service and overchargi­ng have given Uber an opportunit­y. The yellow taxi drivers, on the other hand, slam Uber as “pirates” who are swallowing their incomes in an already tight market.

Uber has said it is committed to working in Turkey and insisted it is operating within the law. “We want to work in cooperatio­n with all the relevant stakeholde­rs to improve transporta­tion options in Turkey and we are committed long-term to Turkey, to the end, as a loyal partner,” it said in a rare Turkish statement this week. The tension in Turkey is one of a number of headaches for Uber and its new chief executive Dara Khosrowsha­hi, who took over last August after founder Travis Kalanick was ousted following a series of scandals. Uber passenger shot dead

In other news, a driver with the ride-sharing service Uber was arrested on Friday for suspicion of first-degree murder after Denver police said he fatally shot a passenger in his vehicle. Michael Andre Hancock, 29, was being held without bond in the Denver County jail pending the formal filing of charges, according to jail records. It was unclear if he had legal representa­tion.

According to a Denver Police probable cause affidavit, on Friday morning a man later identified as Hancock told a motorist on the side of a highway that he had just shot a rider who tried to attack him. Police found a sedan stopped perpendicu­lar to traffic on a ramp and a man with gunshot wounds lying on the floor board of the front passenger seat, the affidavit said.

The Denver Medical Examiner’s Office identified the dead man as Hyun Kim, 45. Police said they removed a semiautoma­tic pistol from Hancock’s waistband, and later recovered 10 spent 40-caliber cartridges on the shoulder of the highway. Hancock was arrested, but police did not provide further details. Uber said in a statement that it was “deeply troubled” by the arrest of Hancock, a contract driver with the company for nearly three years.

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