President of the Transport Operators Development Sustainable Services, TODSS, Egeton Newman, says international ride-sharing service, inDrive, should be ashamed of itself for ignoring months of efforts by local authorities to engage in dialogue.
Statements from inDrive started surfacing after a decision was made to ban ride-hail applications in Jamaica for a year.
The decision followed the abduction and suspected murder of school teacher Danielle Anglin, who purportedly used the inDrive app the day she was reported missing.
Mr. Newman says inDrive was forced to communicate because of the ban.
Egeton Newman, President of TODSS.
In a statement to the media on Tuesday, inDrive says accusations that Ms. Anglin was abducted after using its service are false.
The company said the school teacher last used its platform on May 11, two days before she’s alleged to have disappeared.
In a previous statement, the company said the man arrested in connection with the abduction and possible murder of Ms. Anglin is not a registered user of its platform.
President of the Jamaica Association of Hackney and Contract Carriages, Willard Costley, says he’s awaiting the outcome of the investigations by the police.
Willard Costley, President of the Jamaica Association of Hackney and Contract Carriages.
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