Uber says appeals 1-month philippine suspension, resuming services

Uber says appeals 1-month philippine suspension, resuming services

Play all audios:

Loading...

The Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) decided late on Monday to halt the service over Uber's defiance of an order to cease accepting new driver applications.


Uber said on Tuesday it had appealed to the Philippine authorities to reconsider a one-month suspension handed out to the ride-hailing firm a day earlier, and was resuming services as it


waits for a decision. The Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) decided late on Monday to halt the service over Uber's defiance of an order to cease accepting new


driver applications. Uber is hugely popular in the Philippines, regarded by its users as more reliable and competitive than the country's outdated public transport services. The


suspension led to an outpouring of anger by Filipinos on social media. Uber issued an email to users informing them of the suspension, entitled "we'll be serving you again


soon". In the appeal to the LTFRB, Uber said it had the right to due process and wanted a stay of implementation of the suspension. "This means that Uber's operations will


continue until the motion is resolved," Uber said in a Facebook posting. "Over the course of this morning, tens of thousands of riders were left stranded, causing needless


inconvenience, while drivers were unable to access the earning opportunities they rely on. "We are looking forward to urgently resolving this matter." The LTFRB could not


immediately be reached for comment on Uber announcing its services would restart right away. The Philippines suspension is the latest setback this year to Uber, one of the most valuable


startups in the world with a valuation upwards of $60 billion, which is struggling to recover from a series of scandals and is hiring a new leader. The Philippines was the first Southeast


Asian nation to regulate app-based car-hailing operations after drawing up rules in 2015. Last year the LTFRB suspended the acceptance and processing of applications for all ride-sharing


services, including Uber, to study further how to regulate the industry. Uber said it continued to accept new applications for drivers amid strong demand for the service, but did not process


them. A five-page LTFRB suspension order made available on Tuesday said the suspension was due to the "irresponsible" behaviour of Uber in "unduly challenging the limit of


fair regulation" by continuing to accept driver applications. Grace Poe, a senator and prominent advocate for improving the Philippines' notoriously shoddy transport services, said


the LTFRB's order was "cruel and absurd". In a statement, she said stopping Uber "further exacerbates the problem of having an utter lack of safe, reliable and


convenient transportation options for our people." (This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)