DEMONSTRATING......They
blocked off most of Jalan Bukit Bintang, demonstrating against alleged
government neglect.
By : PATRICK LEE
KUALA LUMPUR: About 200 taxi
drivers blocked off most of Jalan Bukit Bintang for several hours today in a
protest against what they say is the government’s refusal to address their
problems.
Parking their cars in front
of the Grand Millenium Hotel, the drivers demanded a meeting with the Land
Public Transport Commission (SPAD).
Cabbies told reporters that
they were protesting against the city’s free-to-ride GO-KL bus service, which
was introduced in two popular routes last month.
However, representative
Mohammad Asharaf Yasin, 45, said that the free bus ride was only part of the
problem that local drivers faced everyday.
“We are also angry with
SPAD. They chase us away from the roadside everyday. They issue summonses to us
while giving the taxi stands to the big taxi companies [to handle].
“Now with the GO-KL bus
service, they are not only picking up the locals, but also the tourists. For
free! How are we to make money now?” he said.
Despite the presence of more
than 20 police officers, none intervened.
SPAD officials were nowhere
to be found. This angered the cabbies who then blocked the whole stretch of the
road up to the Fahrenheit 88 shopping mall.
Some KL City Hall (DBKL)
officials showed up in an apparent move to issue summonses but it infuriated
the taxi drivers.
Upon seeing these officers,
several cabbies rushed at them, gesturing and shouting loudly, separated only
by a line of policemen. The DBKL men were then whisked away.
Acting like gangsters
Later, some cabbies told FMT
that the protest was also against the heavy-handed action of SPAD officials who
allegedly intimidated the drivers along the busy stretch at about 7.30pm last
night.
According to a police report
lodged by driver Mohd Jamal Abd Nasir Mohd Saad, 51, officers from four
SPAD-marked cars harassed him and his friends.
“The officers came with the
intention of showing who was more powerful, SPAD or the cabbies… they were
rough and provocative,” the report said.
Today, the cabbies said that
SPAD officers acted like “gangsters”.
The protest also saw a host
of issues boil over. Driver Zainal Mohd Kassim, 45, said that both SPAD and the
government ignored their pleas for many years.
“It is so difficult to earn
a living,” said Zainal who has been driving for 20 years.
He said that both KL hotels
and foreign-themed restaurants employed their own touts, and even hired illegal
taxis (or kereta sapu) for their guests.
He estimated that KL has
thousands of taxis, but the government continued to issue taxi permits.
A 2011 Malay Mail article
stated that the city has more than 37,000 taxis, compared to New York City’s
13,000-odd cabs.
“Why are they [government]
putting out new taxis? When are they going to listen to us? After the next
elections?”
A cabbie of three years,
Anuar Omar, 52, asked why cabbies were allowed to take passengers to the KL
International Airport, but were stopped from taking passengers from the
airport. “How can we have such a law?”
At about 7pm, SPAD officials
finally turned up and met with several representatives of the taxi drivers in a
closed-door meeting. They discussed nine issues raised by the cabbies. They
were:
-the GO-KL bus service;
- the RM2 coupon charges at
selected locations;
-lack of taxi stands and
parking, especially along Jalan Bukit Bintang;
-continuous issuance of taxi
permits;
-easier renewal of drivers’
registration cards;
-alleged rough action of
SPAD officials;
-hotel-sponsored touts in
the city;
-airport pickup
restrictions; and
-prohibiting taxis in the
Klang Valley from going beyond Ipoh, Pahang and Malacca.
Speaking to the crowd later,
SPAD Legal Department Chief, Farizul Hazli Baharom agreed to sit down with the
representatives to discuss the issues and reach a solution.
Farizul also promised to
take action against any of his officials if they were found to have acted out
of hand.
The cabbies dispersed
peacefully at about 7.30pm. However, they promised that they would return if
the issues were not settled.
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