Firm faces ongoing battles over workers’ rights and unpaid waiting times after drawing in drivers with huge subsidies

In the middle of the national rail strike last month when demand for cabs was sky-high, a group of Uber drivers decided they, too, would strike for 24 hours. A few hundred of them marched in protest to Uber’s London office in Aldgate Tower, complaining of poverty pay and arbitrary management by algorithm.

It was a typical day for Abdurzak Hadi, an Uber driver, although he has to pinch himself to believe where he has ended up. The 44-year-old father of three arrived in England on his own in 1992 as a teenage refugee, having fled Somalia’s brutal civil war. When he was old enough, he became a minicab driver. Then he signed up with Uber in 2014.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

FCC launches program to give low-income Americans cheaper internet

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) officially launched its (ACP) on Friday that…

Theresa May to step down as MP at general election

Former PM says she wants to focus on causes close to her…

Beijing Olympics 2022

olympics 2022 schedule

‘Do we really need it?’ Council leader questions library service after months of closure

The West Midlands borough’s seven libraries have not resumed service after the…