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Eyewitness News: Regulatory meeting to decide on Uber licences

The ride-hailing company Uber had a much more hard week.

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Taxi drivers have held protests in Mexico, Brazil and Colombia as well as Europe.

Uber has experienced similar protests across the world. “They just come and impose their own regulations”, he said.

In December, for instance, Uber began operations in Portland, Ore. City spokesperson JP Smith says more than 200 Uber vehicles have been impounded since January. “It’s all about having a punch strategy”.

There’s some good news for Uber. But by 2012, shortly after the Paris listings began growing quickly, Airbnb opened an office in the city and started speaking regularly with local authorities.

“Booksellers and pharmacists have also had trouble conforming to this new digital reality, but there are unions to support them”, says Victor Collard, an economics researcher at the Terra Nova think tank.

The company believes that, in the long run, its services and business model will be vindicated.

This approach with regulators is “about finding partners within governments that understand the sharing economy”, said Patrick Robinson, head of public policy in Europe for Airbnb.

“It is not that we do not like them; we like them, especially the technology part of it”, he added.

On Tuesday, metered taxi operators met with Johannesburg Transport MMC Christine Walters to discuss regulations and policy issues in the industry.

The Court said the selective ban was unfair as it has lifted bans on Ola and taxi for Sure.

The court also told the Transport Department of Delhi government to impose any condition on Uber, in accordance with the law if it was inclined to grant licence to the company and told the app-based cab service provider that it will have to comply with the conditions.

Uber has appealed to the Johannesburg metropolitan police to protect their drivers.

Uber and GoGo Van did not reply to calls for comment last night. In September, two senior Uber executives are due to stand trial in the capital for conspiring to organise “illegal work”. The Cab service is said to be available in 58 countries and 300 cities worldwide.

Ride-sharing service Uber was at the center of a flurry of controversies in 2014, and they’re not calming down in 2015.

In her weekly newsletter, titled: “Uber is a test innovation”, Helen Zille, premier of the Western Cape in South Africa, said the National Land Transport Act was under review, and that a significant amendment would be a sub-category to accommodate e-hailing services.

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The company announced earlier this year it aims to create 15 000 jobs in the next two years.

Latin America, Europe cab drivers team up against Uber