Gulf News

Uber drivers in Qatar go on strike

Uber drivers in Doha stay at home yesterday to protest the cuts and an ‘upfront’ service

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Hundreds of drivers with ride-hailing service Uber in Qatar went on strike yesterday for the second time in a year to protest against fare cuts.

The US-based company, which started operations in Doha in 2014, has in recent months cut fares by 15-20 per cent for passengers amid growing competitio­n from local firms.

Uber drivers in Doha stayed home yesterday to protest the cuts and an “upfront” service launched by Uber in November that allows passengers to view the total fare before their journey.

“The upfront isn’t fair. If you get stuck in traffic or the passenger makes extra stops during the journey, we receive nothing for that,” said John, an Ethiopian driver who declined to give his second name.

“If they don’t raise fares and treat drivers better we have many other platforms we can go to. I have a family to support,” he said.

Uber has tried to drive down taxi fares to win customers from local rivals in Qatar like Careem which has a larger market share than Uber in most of the 32 cities in the Middle East, North Africa and Pakistan region in which it operates.

An Uber spokesman in Dubai said the company was “committed to dialogue with partner drivers” and had made improving their experience a priority.

Affordable ride

“We are very proud of the high quality service they offer to riders who want to get around Doha with a safe, efficient and affordable ride,” said the spokesman in a statement.

Thousands of Ethiopians, Indians and Nepalese work as Uber drivers in wealthy Qatar where unions and labour protests are banned and authoritie­s penalise dissent with jail terms or immediate deportatio­n.

Some drivers say they have struggled since an oil slump in mid-2014 that has squeezed state finances and last year saw Doha raise the domestic price of gasoline by 30 per cent.

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