Cape Times

Uber to suspend its service in Greece

- Julia Fioretti

RIDE-HAILING service Uber said yesterday that it would suspend its licensed service in Athens after the approval of local legislatio­n that imposed stricter regulation on the sector.

Uber, which operates a licensed service in the Greek capital, has faced opposition from local taxi drivers who accuse it of taking their business.

“New local regulation­s were voted on recently with provisions that impact ride-sharing services,” Uber said in a blog post. “We have to assess if and how we can operate within this new framework and so will be suspending UberX in Athens from next Tuesday until we can find an appropriat­e solution.”

Uber operates two services in Athens: UberX, which uses profession­al licensed drivers, and UberTAXI, which uses taxi drivers. The new regulation­s require each trip to start and end in the fleet partner’s designated headquarte­rs or parking area, something Uber does not do. A digital registry of all ride-sharing platforms and their passengers will also be created.

The company launched in Europe in 2011, angering some local authoritie­s and taxi drivers who said it did not abide by the same rules on insurance, licensing and safety.

Following widespread protests, court battles and bans, Uber has taken a more emollient stance under its new chief executive Dara Khosrowsha­hi, suspending operations in various cities in order to comply with local regulation­s.

UberX launched in Athens in 2015 and more than 450 000 people have used its smartphone app to book a ride. News of the new regulation last year angered some Athenians and tens of thousands signed a petition launched by Beat – a local ride-sharing service – in favour of ride-hailing services.

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