He said orders would be given to seize their vehicles.
Bernard Cazeneuve's announcement came after striking taxi drivers angered at a loss of income caused by cheap services like UberPop blocked highways, burned tires and smashed cars around France.
Cazeneuve met with taxi union representatives before the announcement in a bid to restore order. He said 70 vehicles were damaged, seven police officers injured and 10 arrests made yesterday when 30 legal complaints were filed against UberPop.
Cazeneuve said he would meet with UberPop officials to tell them their service "is illegal."
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"It must, therefore, be closed," he said. "The government will never accept the law of the jungle."
Taxi drivers say that the U.S. Ride-hailing company Uber is stealing their livelihood. Rising tensions exploded into violence yesterday.
Travelers going to and from the airport walked alongside highways with their bags. With roads blocked, some never made it to the airport.
It wasn't immediately clear what type of car Love was riding in.
Taxi drivers are angry, saying Uber's lowest cost service is taking their livelihood away.
Despite repeated rulings against the low-cost UberPop service, its drivers have continued to ply French roads and the American company is actively recruiting drivers and passengers alike. Uber claims to have a total of 400,000 customers a month in France.
Riot police chased strikers from Paris' ring road, where protesters torched tires in the middle of the roadway and swarmed onto exit ramps at rush hour.