>> ASIAONE / NEWS / LATEST NEWS / ASIA / STORY
China city plans bigger fares for striking cabbies
Tue, Nov 04, 2008
Reuters

BEIJING - China's fourth-largest city promised on Tuesday to address concerns over fuel and pay in a bid to end a taxi drivers' strike which triggered attacks on cabs and police cars, state media said.

Cab drivers in Chongqing launched a rare strike on Monday in protest against a range of gripes ranging from scarcity of natural gas fuel to heavy traffic fines.

Three police cars and more than a dozen other vehicles were smashed by a crowd of about 100 people, mainly striking cabbies, who intercepted working taxis and pulled drivers and passengers from cars, Xinhua news agency said.

The southwestern city promised to increase the amount of fuel available, punish unlicensed taxis and "revise the division of fares between drivers and companies in favour of the drivers", Xinhua news agency quoted an official as saying.

Refuelling currently means waiting in line for up to three hours as often as four times per day, and taxi owners are
suspected of extorting increasingly high monthly usage fees from drivers, the report said.

China's cab drivers have been squeezed in recent years by sharply rising gas prices and rapid inflation, which have not been fully matched by increases in their rates.

Officials are reluctant to let them charge more because taxis are a key means of getting around in a country where car ownership is still relatively limited and public transport is often crammed and slow.

 

 
STORY INDEX
 
  Thai transvestite beauty pageant cancelled amid political turmoil
   
 
  Blogger's remand extended
   
 
  More S'pore-Japan flights
   
 
  Transvestite teacher to be transferred
   
 
  China used planes, rockets to prevent wet end of Games
   
 
  Australian plan to create 'homophobia free-zones' attacked
   
 
  Philippines leader gets oil firms to cut diesel prices
   
 
  China city plans bigger fares for striking cabbies
   
 
  Defiant extremists descend on Bali bombers' village
   
 
  Sacked air force chief likens Japan to N. Korea
   
>> RELATED STORY
China city plans bigger fares for striking cabbies
This is China's worst year
China's envoy heads to Taiwan
President Hu to visit S'pore
Arsenic pollutes scenic lake in China: state media

Elsewhere in AsiaOne...

Investor Relations: Four Singapore firms invest $127m in Tianjin

Wine,Dine&Unwind: Finding oneself in the shadow of a monk

Travel: Travel to Taiwan eased

Health: Shoppers switch to non-China milk

Motoring: Fewer taxis on the road as higher fares see demand falling

Digital: Skype's China spying sparks anger

Business: Tainted products

Multimedia: 16 killed in China ahead of Games

 

We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg