Bike taxi riders urge govt to reverse crackdown
Over 100 bike taxi riders met Karnataka Health Minister Dinesh Gundu Rao, demanding legal status and regulation. Riders allege harassment, unclear policy, and rising auto union pressure, calling the crackdown unfair amid livelihood struggles.
ANI
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OLA Cabs. Representative image
Bengaluru, 20 June
A group of 110 bike taxi riders from Namma Bike Taxi Association met State Health Minister Dinesh Gundu Rao and Dasarahalli MLA S Muniraju on Thursday, urging the government to reverse its crackdown on bike taxis.
Representing tens
of thousands of bike taxi riders across the State, the delegation submitted a
petition demanding legal recognition of bike taxis and a clear policy framework
to end ongoing harassment and confusion.
The meeting
follows a series of open letters addressed to Chief Minister Siddaramaiah,
Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge, and MP Rahul Gandhi, none of which
received a response.
Notably, the same
Congress government passed a Gig Worker Welfare Bill just last month, while
simultaneously dismantling a sector that offers flexible income to thousands.
Drivers also
raised alarm over growing intimidation by auto unions. One auto union leader
has publicly urged members to prevent bike taxi protests and has even targeted
figures like Mohandas Pai for speaking in support.
Namma Bike Taxi
Association President Mohammed Salim was denied permission to protest at
Freedom Park, allegedly under pressure from these groups.
Salim said,
"My phone won't stop ringing--250 to 300 drivers call me every day, asking
for help. And I don't know what to tell them. Should we lose our livelihoods
because the government has no policy for bike taxis? We need regulation, not a
ban.”
A 37-year old
rider, said, "I've borrowed twice already this month. My daughter's school
is asking for fees, and I have nothing left."
Another
26-year-old rider, who rides for Ola and Uber, added, "Delivery partners
can use the same bike to deliver food--but I get fined for giving someone a
ride. Where's the logic in that?"
Commuters also
slammed the government's decision.
Sneha, 19, a college
student, said, "Auto fares are through the roof. I used to pay Rs 50 on a
bike taxi--now autos charge Rs 100 to Rs 150 for the same distance."
Bala, 31, daily
commuter, said, "Why ban something without asking citizens first?"
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