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Uber hits roadblock as CEO charged in South Korea

Travis Kalanick and Uber's Korean partner MK Korea, a local rental car service operator, were indicted for violating a law on passenger transport services

An illustration picture shows the logo of car-sharing service app Uber on a smartphone next to the picture of an official German taxi sign in Frankfurt

AFP PTI Seoul
South Korean prosecutors brought charges today against the founder and CEO of controversial smartphone taxi app Uber for operating an illegal cab service, the latest roadblock for the California-based firm.

The charges, which carry a maximum penalty of two years in jail or a 20 million won ($18,150) fine, came with the company facing criticism and bad publicity around the world despite its high levels of popularity.

Travis Kalanick and Uber's Korean partner MK Korea, a local rental car service operator, were indicted for violating a law on passenger transport services.

Neither was detained, and it was not immediately clear whether Kalanick would visit Seoul for trial. Last year he showed up at a police station in Seoul for questioning.
 
In South Korea, rental car service operators are barred from conducting passenger transport business using their cars.

Uber said in a statement it would fully cooperate with the investigation and it is "confident" the court would make a fair and sensible judgment.

"We firmly believe that our service, which connects drivers and riders via an application, is not only legal in Korea, but that it is being welcomed and supported by consumers," the statement said.

Uber, which operates in more than 50 countries, started its service in Seoul in 2013.

Last year the company launched Uber Black, which links users with limousines and, in October this year, it unveiled UberX, which connects passengers with drivers of non-luxury vehicles.

The Seoul city government, however, filed complaints with prosecutors, saying Uber's operations raised passenger safety issues and threatened the livelihoods of licensed taxi drivers.

City regulators have launched a crackdown on drivers and rental cars that cooperate with Uber, with a one million won reward offered for those who reported the company's activities.

But Uber has vowed to continue its business regardless of the crackdown.

South Korea's online community was split over the indictment, with some users describing Uber as illegal and supporting the crackdown on its service in order to protect domestic taxi drivers.

Uber is illegal and endangers the livelihood of our taxi drivers," one user wrote on the popular Internet portal Naver.Com.

Uber has also sparked angry protests by cab drivers in France and other countries who fear it is chipping away at their client base.

It made headlines this month when an Uber driver allegedly raped a passenger in New Delhi.

Also today the company apologised for raising prices as frightened people fled an armed cafe siege in the Australian city of Sydney last week.

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First Published: Dec 24 2014 | 4:56 PM IST

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