Angry South Korean taxi drivers strike against
carpooling service
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[December 20, 2018]
By Heekyong Yang
SEOUL (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of
South Korean taxi drivers walked off the job across the country on
Thursday and held a mass rally in downtown Seoul to protest against a
carpooling service that they say will destroy their jobs.
The demonstration came days after the death of a taxi driver who set
himself on a fire in protest against plans to introduce car-pooling
service Kakao Mobility, a unit of mobile messenger operator Kakao Corp.
"If the service is implemented, my income will shrink by half. I'll fall
into poverty," said driver Yoon Woo-seok, 62, at the rally in front of
the National Assembly.
Drivers wearing black headbands and ribbons to mourn their colleague
chanted "combat illegal carpool".
Kakao postponed the official launch of its service after the suicide.
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"We will have continued consultations with the industry, parliament and
the government," the company said.
South Korea has one of the world's highest smartphone penetration rates,
but app-based car-hailing services such as U.S.-based Uber [UBER.UL]
have not taken off, partly because of strong unions and tight
regulations in Asia's fourth-biggest economy.
The protests pose a challenge to the labor-friendly government, which
has also pledged to promote new industries to cut reliance on big
conglomerates, such as Hyundai and Samsung.
According to a survey in October by pollster Realmeter, more than 50
percent of the public support carpooling.
The taxi strike stranded commuters and disrupted traffic, with some
taxis temporarily blocking a road leading to a highway in the central
city of Daejeon, according to photos and media reports.
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Hundreds of taxis are parked to protest against a carpool service
application launched by Kakao Corp in Seoul, South Korea, December
20, 2018. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
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Seoul's taxi operation rate dropped to 50 percent compared to the same day last
week, a transport ministry official told Reuters.
Taxi drivers say they already suffer low incomes and long hours.
"My entire family is scraping a living on my tiny income," said another driver,
Lee Nam-soo, 67.
He said he earned 80,000 won ($70) to 90,000 won a day.
"There's no way I can survive if Kakao operates."
Taxi associations urged parliament to ban carpooling, while calling for a
crackdown on what they say are illegal carpooling services.
The transport law bans the use of personal vehicles for commercial purposes, but
allows carpooling services of drivers with riders heading in the same direction
during "commuting" hours. Commuting times are not specified by law, causing
confusion.
The ruling party has created a task force to try to resolve the dispute.
(Reporting by Heekyong Yang, additional reporting by Hyunjoo Jin and Ju-min
Park; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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