Uber bosses held after taxi riots

French taxi drivers, who are on strike, block the traffic on the Paris ring road during a national protest against car-sharing service Uber, in Paris, France, June 25, 2015. French taxi drivers stepped up protests against U.S. online cab service UberPOP on Thursday, blocking road access to airports and train stations in Paris and other cities. REUTERS/Charles Platiau ATTENTION EDITORS : FRENCH LAW REQUIRES THAT REGISTRATION PLATE CAN NOT BE PUBLISHED IN FRANCE

French taxi drivers, who are on strike, block the traffic on the Paris ring road during a national protest against car-sharing service Uber, in Paris, France, June 25, 2015. French taxi drivers stepped up protests against U.S. online cab service UberPOP on Thursday, blocking road access to airports and train stations in Paris and other cities. REUTERS/Charles Platiau ATTENTION EDITORS : FRENCH LAW REQUIRES THAT REGISTRATION PLATE CAN NOT BE PUBLISHED IN FRANCE

Published Jun 30, 2015

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Paris, France - French police have arrested two executives of Uber, the company whose “amateur cab” phone service provoked violent protests by Parisian taxi-drivers last week. The heads of the American company's European and French operations were being held in custody by traffic police on Monday night.

They were being questioned as part of a seven-month investigation into Uber in France, which has been declared illegal by French courts and by the French government.

APPEASING REGISTERED TAXI DRIVERS

The timing of the arrests will be interpreted as an attempt to appease registered taxi drivers who overturned and burned Uber cars and blocked airports and railway stations during a strike on Thursday. The arrested men, both French, were named as Pierre-Dimitri Gore-Coty, director general of Uber in Europe, and Thibaud Simphal, director-general of Uber in France.

Uber, and its French arm Uberpop, markets a mobile phone application which puts customers in touch with unregistered and supposedly “amateur” cab drivers.

The company insists that its operations are legal in France. Courts have disagreed on several occasions. After last week's riots, the government condemned the violence but took the side of the registered taxi-drivers.

The Independent

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