France to ban Uber’s ride-hailing service in 2015
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Uber’s low-cost ride-hailing service will be banned in France next year, the government said Monday as hundreds of taxi drivers blocked roads around Paris to protest what they say are its unfair business practices.
A new law tightening regulations for chauffeured rides will in effect ban the UberPop service as of Jan. 1, said Pierre-Henry Brandet, spokesman for France’s Interior Ministry.
“Currently, people who use UberPop are not protected if there is an accident. So not only is it illegal to offer this service but for the consumer there is a real danger,” Brandet told the BFM television network.
Several hundred taxis blocked the roads heading from the Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport, then inched toward the French capital in their latest protest of the ride-sharing company.
France is the latest of several places where Uber has faced challenges to its service, which matches people seeking rides with drivers through a cellphone app. Traditional taxis say Uber has an unfair advantage because its drivers don’t face the same requirements, insurance and taxes.
On Friday, a French court stopped short of banning the company but ordered Uber to make changes, including omitting “all mention suggesting it is legal” for its drivers to act as taxis — that is, driving around and waiting for clients.
Uber did not immediately comment.
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