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Uber cab driver in India charged with rape, kidnapping

Police escort Uber cab driver Shiv Kumar Yadav (C, in black) who is accused of raping a woman, following his court appearance at the Tis Hazari court on December 8, 2014 in New Delhi, India. Shiv Kumar Yadav was remanded in custody for three days while police investigates the case. Delhi government banned Uber from operating in the Indian capital for failing to do background check on Shiv Kumar, who had previously been accused of assault.
Police escort Uber cab driver Shiv Kumar Yadav (C, in black) who is accused of raping a woman, following his court appearance at the Tis Hazari court on December 8, 2014 in New Delhi, India. Shiv Kumar Yadav was remanded in custody for three days while police investigates the case. Delhi government banned Uber from operating in the Indian capital for failing to do background check on Shiv Kumar, who had previously been accused of assault. Raj K Raj/Hindustan Times via Getty Images

NEW DELHI – A New Delhi court charged an Uber cab driver on Tuesday with rape, kidnapping and criminal intimidation in a case that has renewed a national fury over chronic sexual violence in India. Authorities are still investigating whether Uber should also be charged.

Judge Kaveri Baweja ordered the case to begin Thursday in a special fast-track court set up in 2013 to bypass India’s lumbering judicial system.

The 32-year-old suspect, Shiv Kumar Yadav, entered a plea of innocence. He has been in custody since a 25-year-old woman filed a police complaint alleging he assaulted her after she hired him for a ride home on Dec. 5.

Authorities, meanwhile, were still investigating the possibility of criminal charges against the company for allegedly misrepresenting the safety of its service, police official Brijendra Kumar Yadav said.

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“That is a separate case, and will take some time,” he said, without giving details.

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The case has appalled many in India, occurring almost exactly two years after a young woman was fatally gang raped on a bus in the capital. It has sparked new demands for better protections for women.

It also dealt a blow to Uber, which has attracted global praise and controversy with a service that lets passengers summon cars through an app in more than 250 cities around the world.

The taxi alternative, valued at $40 billion, faces multiple legal and regulatory challenges as it expands in the United States and elsewhere, including a lawsuit in California alleging that it exaggerates how comprehensive its driver background checks are.

After the rape case in New Delhi, Indian police questioned an Uber official about the company’s claim it conducts comprehensive background checks. The company was also banned in the capital as well as in the southern technology hub of Hyderabad and the entire southern state of Karnataka.

Uber security chief Philip Cardenas pledged last month to “build new safety programs and intensify others,” according to a blog entry on the San Francisco-based company’s website on the same day that an Uber driver in Massachusetts was arraigned on charges including rape and kidnapping.

Cardenas said the changes would include creating teams that can rapidly respond to safety-related reports and new ways to screen would-be drivers.

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