Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Go-Jek Coming To Malaysia

Image result for gojekMotorcycle ride-hailing services, such as Indonesia’s Go-Jek, has been given the green light by the Cabinet to operate locally. Entrepreneur Development Minister Datuk Seri Mohd Redzuan Yusof said the matter was agreed upon in principle, following a lengthy discussion during today’s Cabinet meeting.
“Cabinet in principle has agreed for this Go-Jek service to be implemented. The Youth and Sports Ministry and the Transport Ministry have been asked to work together and discuss what laws need to be amended or created to enable this service to be implemented in the country,” he was quoted saying in the report after attending a ministry program in Putrajaya.
The minister also pressed on the importance of such services be implemented according to existing laws to ensure safety. 
“We want to ensure whatever we implement to develop the economy of our youth, it does not contravene the law,” he said in the report.
On Monday, Transport Minister Anthony Loke today confirmed that he, Youth and Sports Minister Syed Saddiq Abdul Rahman, Gojek founder Nadiem Makarim and Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad had met to discuss the possibility of rolling out the two-wheeled ride hailing services in Malaysia.
Loke had pointed out that it was his task as transport minister to look after the safety of road users while Syed Saddiq’s job is to look after the youth and create job opportunities for them.
Last year, Loke had said that Putrajaya did not plan to legalise motorbike hailing services like Go-Jek on Malaysian roads. He told the Dewan Rakyat that the government does not feel the two-wheeled ride hailing services are suitable to be rolled out yet due to the high rate of road accidents involving motorcycles.
Go-jek is operated by Jakarta-based PT Aplikasi Karya Anak Bangsa, and the company is estimated to be worth US$10 billion (RM42 billion). It runs businesses in Indonesia, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand, and planning to spread its wings to the Philippines besides Malaysia.

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