Madrid taxis join Barcelona strike against Uber

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Madrid taxis join Barcelona strike against Uber

AFP

Taxi drivers in Spain demand that the number of ride-hailing vehicles should be limited

MADRID, Spain – Taxi drivers in Madrid went on strike Saturday, July 28, in solidarity with Barcelona cabbies protesting against “unfair competition” from Uber and Cabify.

The federation of Madrid taxis claimed all 15,000 drivers in the capital had joined the movement and that it would spread to other cities.

“All taxis have spontaneously and progressively stopped work, paralyzing services in the capital, at the airport, around bus and railway stations,” federation secretary Santiago Simon Vicente told AFP.

“The main problem is the proliferation of VTC (tourism vehicle with chauffeur) licenses,” he said.

“There are more and more of them, thousands, and  it’s unfair competition.”

The federation called on the authorities to enforce legislation under which there should be 30 traditional taxis for every VTC (tourism vehicle with chauffeur).

Today there are only five for every VTC, said Santiago Simon Vicente.

Taxi drivers cut access to central Barcelona on Friday after the Spanish government appealed a ruling approved by Barcelona authorities that limited the number of licenses for Uber-style services.

“Today everything is blocked in Barcelona, the airport, the stations, etc,” the head of Taxis Companys, Luis Lopez, told AFP.

Violence erupted in Barcelona where the strike began on Wednesday. Drivers threw stones at the vehicles of Uber-style licensed private chauffeurs, with some ending up with flat tyres.

The attacks prompted Uber and Cabify to suspend their services in Barcelona for as long as the taxi strike lasts.

Transport company Unauto, which represents Uber and Cabify, on Saturday urged the Spanish government to “take back control of the streets saying “violent” taxi drivers were trying to defend a monopoly. – Rappler.com

 

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!