YUEYANG, Hunan, April 13 (Xinhua) -- About one third
of taxis in the central China city of Yueyang, Hunan Province, are back on the
road Monday, after their drivers went on strike for three days protesting
overcharging by taxi firms.
About 500 taxis were back on the road Monday morning,
after the city government agreed to intervene with taxi firms to get them to
reduce the monthly fees paid by the drivers to taxi companies, said Fu Hongbo,
an official in charge of passenger services at the urban management bureau.
In a letter, broadcast non-stop at Yueyang's
television and radio stations Sunday, the city government said taxi drivers
could suspend paying their monthly fees until new standards were set.
The government also told pricing authorities to
"thoroughly investigate the issue, hear the drivers' grievances and readjust the
monthly fees".
Dozens of drivers parked their cabs outside an office
building of the Yueyang city government Friday, demanding a cut in fees, better
services by taxi companies and a crackdown on illegal cabs.
More drivers joined the strike Saturday. Some taxis
still in operation were stopped, smashed and their drivers were beaten. Police
detained 11 people for allegedly forcing drivers into the strike.
Yueyang has 11 taxi firms operating about 1,600 taxis and
employing 3,000 drivers. Under an agreement with the companies, each driver
must pay the company about 6,400 yuan (941 U.S. dollars) per month. Compared
with illegal cabbies who operated at much lower costs, many taxi drivers
complained they made too little.
"Forty-five of our company's 304 taxis are back on
the road as of midday," said Hong Pijin, manager of Sanwei Taxi Service, one of
the biggest in Yueyang.
He said the management sent 17 teams of workers to
convey the government's message to taxi drivers on Sunday in order to get them
back to work.
Yet some drivers are still watching the situation.
"No, I won't get back on the road. Not until we know for sure the monthly fee
has been reduced," said a driver surnamed Hu.
He was echoed by dozens of other drivers who had
parked their cabs near Luowang Intersection in the city center Monday morning.
Strikes are rare in China, but taxi strikes were
reported in several cities including Chongqing, Sanya and Shantou last year over
high rental fees and unlicensed cabs.
Taxi drivers in those cities resumed work after the
local authorities promised to reduce rental fees and crack down on illegal cabs,
and fees were later reduced in all three cities.