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Is Uber taxi
service in
A seven-seat Uber
car arrives shortly after a client makes an order on her smartphone.
Tuoi Tre
While Uber, an American taxi app
service that offers low fares, expensive vehicles and gives passengers the
feeling of riding in their own lavish cars, has recently launched its service
in Hanoi, it has met with dubiety and protest from taxi operators, relevant
agencies and clients in Ho Chi Minh City regarding its legitimacy,
competition and clients’ safety.
Since June 2014, local and foreign
passengers in HCMC have enjoyed the luxury and convenience which Uber’s
luxury cars have brought.
The service offers lower fares than
local taxi operators and great convenience, as it only takes a few swipes on
a smartphone for clients to start up their Uber app, pick a car, and select
the location where they wish to be picked up.
The app instantly tells them that a
car with a specified license plate will arrive in 10-15 minutes. A photo of
the driver is also provided.
All a client has to do now is to
wait for the car to arrive. They can also track the car on their phone.
Uber cars have no markings on the
outside to show that they are rented.
Where’s the license?
Despite Uber’s undeniable benefits,
its clients remain concerned about its legitimacy, drivers’ qualifications
and safety issues, while taxi operators have voiced their protest regarding
its assumed unfair competition, and relevant agencies including
transport and public security are baffled at how to deal with it.
Ta Long Hy, CEO of Vinasun, a major
Vietnamese taxi operator, and chair of the HCMC Taxi Association, told Tuoi
Tre (Youth) newspaper that Uber’s operation in the city so far is illegal, as
it mostly uses non-business, individually-owned cars, and offers unhealthily
low fares as it doesn’t pay any tax.
“Uber is drawing more and more
clients, which means hurting the local taxi operators’ business and jeopardizing
several thousands of taxi drivers’ livelihood,” Hy noted.
He added prior to the presence of
Uber’s service, two similar services called Easy Taxi and Grab Taxi had also
been launched.
These two services can be applied in taxi businesses, while Uber’s service can’t, Hy stressed.
The HCMC Taxi Association has
petitioned to several relevant agencies for solutions and has received
positive feedback.
Duong Hong Thanh, vice director of
the HCMC Department of Transport, urged that the Ministry of Transport better
handle the novel service.
Representatives of the HCMC Tax
Department told a recent meeting between relevant agencies that Uber’s
operation is illegal, as all its clients’ payments are made via international
cards, and Uber and its cars’ owners don’t register for business operations
or don’t perform tax registration or payment.
However, there’s little the tax
department can do as Uber is based in the
Even when the accounts are identified,
the department is still unlikely to collect tax from Uber as it has no way to
work out the company’s revenues, they stressed.
Meanwhile, the Department of
Information and Communication said it can use technical approaches to stall
Uber’s service, pending the approval from the Ministry of Information and
Communication.
Representatives of the local police
raised concerns regarding the identity of the cars’ owners, drivers’ training
and qualifications and clients’ safety, including robberies staged by the
drivers themselves.
Likewise, lawyer Nguyen Huu The
Trach urged that Uber’s operation be put under the control of Law on
Enterprises, which stipulates that the company has good management of its
drivers and is liable towards clients.
Clients’ concerns
Tran Minh Quang, of HCMC’s Go Vap
District, said he enthusiastically embraces Uber’s service for its low fares
and drivers’ good manners.
For example, it took him only
VND42,000 (US$2) in a Uber car from District 3’s Con Rua (Lake) roundabout to
Phu Nhuan District’s Ga Market, while a taxi ride costs him some VND60,000 on
the same route.
“However, I’m quite concerned about Uber’s legitimacy, as its cars bear no markings or logos. I myself and even drivers don’t know if the service is lawfully registered,” Quang said.
He also raises questions on who will
be responsible in case of passengers’ forgotten property in the cars and
drivers’ refusal to cooperate.
“I think authorities should control
the service more strictly and efficiently. We passengers want rides which are
not only cheap and convenient but also safe,” he stressed.
Meanwhile, T.- a new driver for
Uber- said that he and other drivers work for Uber via a local transport
company.
He said that apart from the low
fares, convenience and lavish rides which the service offers, clients
don’t need to offer drivers tips and are also welcome to comment on the
drivers’ manners.
Those with negative client comments
are likely to lose their jobs, T. added.
He added that, after dropping a
passenger, he usually stays in the area, waiting for calls from new
passengers instead of searching for new ones as taxi drivers generally do.
“However, I’m quite worried about
how to react to traffic police if I’m pulled over for some violations, as the
cars are individually-owned and aren’t registered for passenger transport,”
T. added.
Dr. Nguyen Duc Thanh, of
Thanh called for better management
of the new service instead.
Meanwhile, Mike Brown, - Uber’s
regional general manager in Southeast Asia- maintained that Uber does not
possess, operate any means of transport or hire any drivers.
“Instead, Uber is providing a free
transaction, which guarantees drivers and clients safe rides. Each of our
partners earns their own profits. Uber only creates opportunities for drivers
to earn additional incomes,” he confirmed.
Brown asserted that his company has
complied with all current tax laws and made full tax payments in any country
where their service is launched.
He also underlined that Uber’s
service is strictly obedient of the countries’ transport laws and is
recognized by relevant agencies there.
TUOI TRE NEWS
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Chủ Nhật, 16 tháng 11, 2014
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