Taxi drivers criticize Istanbul mayor's plan to raise number of licenses

Taxi drivers have lashed out at Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu's plan to add 5,000 more taxi licenses to the market. "Driving taxis is not the municipality’s job,” said the head of the Istanbul Airport Taxi Drivers Cooperative.

Duvar English 

Taxi drivers have lashed out at Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu's plan to add 5,000 more taxi licenses to the market. Most of Istanbul's taxi drivers oppose İmamoğlu's plan.

“At the moment, taxi drivers can’t even afford tea and are unable to bring bread back to home. They’re driving around hungry. Driving taxis is not the municipality’s job,” said Fahrettin Can, the head of the Istanbul Airport Taxi Drivers Cooperative. 

The municipality of Istanbul announced plans to raise the number of taxi licenses in the city, which has remained unchanged for years. Licenses are costly and drivers usually pay a daily fee to license owners to drive their vehicles. 

With high taxes inflating the price of gasoline and relatively low cab fares, taxi drivers in Istanbul work long hours for relatively low pay, a situation the coronavirus pandemic has exacerbated. 

“Our mayor gave examples from Europe. He says 'Paris has a population of 8.5 million, and there are 16,000 taxis.' Paris has a population of 8.5 million but there are nearly 50 million tourists. Is the mayor taking this into account? Do people in Paris have the same purchasing power as we do? All of this needs to be taken into account and a scientific study should be carried out,” Can said.

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