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Drivers struggle after Uber closes in Vietnam

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A number of drivers who used to work with the ride-hailing company Uber say they are uncertain about their futures after the company closed here two weeks ago.

UberMOTO driver Tien Sy had only worked for the company for a month in Hanoi, but says he feels his whole life has fallen apart now they have closed.

"I had a stable source of customers with Uber and was able to make ends meet. I am so disappoint­ed that the company is now closed in Vietnam," he said.

Uber officially closed in Vietnam on April 8, two weeks after it announced its withdrawal from the market in exchange for a 27.5% stake in its Singapore-based rival, Grab.

The two weeks' notice Uber gave its drivers and employees seems not enough to prepare them for the sudden change. UberMOTO driver Nguyen Thi Kim Cuong in Ho Chi Minh (HCM) City said she was not ready to switch to other ride-hailing services.

"People told me there were other similar companies out there, but since my husband and I had both driven for Uber for more than a year, we felt so connected to the company," she told Zingonline newspaper.

"At the moment we don't know what we will do next," she said.

Former Uber employees are also living in uncertaint­y.

Although they were all promised jobs at Grab, many see that company as "the enemy".

"How can we not see the irony, now that we have to try to love the values, the people and the colour that we once disliked? It's hard just to think about it," Duyen Pham, a former Uber's city operators official in HCM City, wrote on her social media profile.

"We have been fighting for so long, so much prejudice has been formed," she wrote, referring to the relationsh­ip between Uber and Grab. "For many of us, it is better to be unemployed than to work for ‘them'."

Uber leaving Vietnam without instructin­g its drivers and employees how to transfer to Grab has posed the question of corporate responsibi­lity to labourers.

Vo Dan Mach, a member of the HCM City Bar Associatio­n, told Tuoi Tre(Youth) newspaper that the "sharing economy", has brought about disadvanta­ges to labourers since no written labour contracts ever existed between Uber and its drivers.

Nguyen Tuan Anh, chief executive officer of Grab in Vietnam, said ride-hailing services like Grab and Uber cannot provide benefits like social insurance, health insurance or training to its drivers like traditiona­l business because drivers are not their employees.

"The relationsh­ip between Uber, Grab and their drivers is partnershi­p," he said.

Uber representa­tives could not be reached for comment.

Since Uber's office closed in Vietnam on March 27, Grab helped Uber drivers make the switch to their company. On April 7, shortly before the Uber applicatio­n stopped working in Vietnam, Grab sent a thank-you email to its customers, drivers and new drivers who transferre­d from Uber.

"To make sure that we reached as many Uber drivers as possible, several Grab employees and driver-partners had gone out to find them, gave them informatio­n and invited them to Grab's support centres before the Uber applicatio­n ceased to work on April 8, 2018," it reads.

"Having more drivers joining Grab does not mean there will be fewer customers, because now we have a lot more customers who switched from Uber," said the section of the email addressing the new drivers.

"You can increase your income because there will be more rides, and the distributi­on of the rides will be faster and more effective, now that we are on the same platform." — Viet Nam News/ANN

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