Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has claimed at a Ramadan dinner that the ridesharing outfit’s business is “over” in the country, with the interior ministry reportedly giving “the orders.”
Uber currently runs under a license that costs much less than taxi plates (about $760 US instead of $360,000), but Erdogan argued that it was “not possible” to offer a taxi alternative with that lower-cost option.
Its service continues to operate in Turkey as of this writing, although there’s a court hearing on Uber scheduled for June 4th. Critics aren’t entirely convinced there will be a shutdown, though — one Uber operator speaking to Bloomberg called an anti-Uber crackdown an “election pledge” that didn’t carry much weight.
If there is a ban, it would compound Uber’s ongoing problems finding acceptance abroad.
It recently dodged bans in places like the Czech Republic and Egypt, but it hasn’t always been lucky — with London as an example.
Bloomberg
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