Ride-share giant Uber bans customer after Alberta driver shares racist rant video
Ride-share giant Uber has banned a customer from its app after one of its drivers posted a social media video showing him enduring a racist tirade.
Mandeep Sehgal says it was important for him to call attention to it because South Asian drivers are increasingly facing racist taunts and Uber was taking too long to hold his belligerent customer accountable.
Sehgal said South Asian Uber drivers are also increasingly installing cameras in their cars for safety due to the hate.
"Enough is enough. We are not going to tolerate it anymore," Sehgal, 40, said, in an interview.
Uber, in an emailed statement this week, confirmed action had been taken.
"We have been in touch with the driver, and have removed the rider from the platform," the company said.
Uber added it has made it easier to report discrimination on its platform, and reminded users that they are required to follow its guidelines, which state "discriminatory language … vilifying, or asking questions about sensitive topics regarding national origin, race, ethnicity" and "making racial comments or using slurs is never allowed."
A spokesperson for the app did not answer questions about why it took so long for it to ban the customer.
Sehgal said he picked up a man from a remote neighbourhood southeast of Calgary on the night of Sept. 21.
Sehgal can be seen in an approximately three-minute long dashcam video.
As he begins driving, the man asks Sehgal where he's from. Sehgal tells him he's Indian.
He asks Sehgal if he's a permanent resident. Sehgal replies that he is, and that he arrived in Canada seven years ago.
Are you going to get a "white chick" pregnant, the man asks.
Sehgal laughs nervously and replies: "Why you're so judgmental?"
"Cause I'm born and raised Calgarian. I'm white blood of the land. You are on my land. I'm the blood of the land," the man replies.
"You're not even close to being from here.”
That was enough for Sehgal, who said he no longer felt safe with this passenger and was done with tolerating "ignorant customers" complaining about immigrants over the three years he has been driving for Uber.
He pulled over and ordered the passenger out, telling him, "You can get out here on your land."
Sehgal said the man left him shaken and upset.
"I'm paying taxes. I'm a law-abiding citizen. If I have to prove that I belong here, it creates insecurity," he said, adding both his children were born in Canada.
Sehgal said he later contacted Uber support to report the man's behaviour and send the dashcam video.
But he said the app's support workers told him they couldn't do anything. They also refused to remove the customer from the app and the low driver rating he had left behind.
A frustrated Sehgal then posted the video on social media. He said Uber contacted him soon after to warn him he can't publish video without a customer's consent but, again, didn't take action to hold the man accountable.
He said the video gained traction this month on the internet, after it was shared again thousands of times on a different platform and, ultimately, Uber banned the rider.
Sehgal said he, himself, erred. The RCMP directed him to remove the address he had posted of the area he picked up the man because it was not related to the customer, putting an innocent third party at risk of harassment.
Evan Balgord, the executive director of the Canadian Anti-Hate Network, said Sehgal’s plight is part of a larger, growing problem.
Balgord said he has recently observed a lot of hate targeting Canada's South Asian diaspora in response to politicians discussing immigration and student visas in Canada.
He said Sehgal’s customer needs to reflect on his actions.
"I hope he learns from this experience, changes his beliefs, and comes forward and apologizes," Balgord said.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 1, 2024.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
'They thought he wasn't making it': B.C. soccer star's family on his shocking shooting — and remarkable recovery
Born and raised in Metro Vancouver, Nathan Demian was living his dream playing soccer for top-ranked Ohio State University, when he was shot during a post-game pizza run with his brother Saturday night.
MPs approve $21.6B in supplementary spending; Conservatives vote against
Parliament has approved $21.6 billion in government spending, in a late Tuesday vote in the House of Commons.
No injuries reported after gunshots fired inside Etobicoke high school, 2 suspects outstanding
Toronto police are searching for two suspects after gunshots were fired inside an Etobicoke high school late Tuesday afternoon.
DEVELOPING Luigi Mangione shouts as he is led into courthouse where he contests extradition to N.Y.
The suspect in the killing of UnitedHealthcare’s CEO struggled with deputies and shouted Tuesday while arriving for a court appearance in Pennsylvania, a day after he was arrested at a McDonald’s and charged with murder.
Celebrities and coastal residents flee from wind-driven wildfire in Malibu
Evacuation orders and warnings have gone out to 20,000 Southern California residents Tuesday as firefighters battled a wind-driven wildfire in Malibu that burned near celebrities' seaside mansions, horse farms and Pepperdine University, the sheriff's department said.
Waterloo Region mistakenly applied $13.7M discount to Amazon build in Blair
The Region of Waterloo will not be able to demand $13.7 million from a developer after they said a discount was mistakenly issued for the development of an Amazon fulfillment centre.
Dolly Parton explains why her longtime husband doesn't attend events with her
Dolly Parton has been married for 58 years, but you probably could count on one hand the times you have seen her with her husband.
'Which one of those two is going to win?': Poilievre prods Trudeau, Freeland over spending tension
Revived talk of tensions between Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland prompted new questions Tuesday, about how big the federal deficit will be in next week's economic update.
Ex-minister cites 'threat to security' for denying emergency passport to Abdelrazik
Former foreign minister Lawrence Cannon says he denied an emergency passport to Abousfian Abdelrazik in 2009 because he considered the Montreal man a possible threat to national security.