LONDON: Careem has passed the one million driver mark as it competes with global rival Uber in cities across the region.
The Dubai-based ride app, which operates in 14 countries mainly in the Middle East, said that Faisal Saleh from Hail in Ƶ became the millionth person to sign up to the service.
The ride hailing app claims to be creating between 60,000 and 70,000 jobs per month in cities from Dubai to Casablanca amid fierce regional competition with global rival Uber.
“We are humbled about achieving our target of creating one million jobs in the region,” said Careem CEO Mudassir Sheikha. “We started Careem with a mission to simplify and improve the lives of people.”
Careem was founded in Dubai in 2012 by Sheikha and Magnus Olsson, two former McKinsey consultants. Abdulla Elyas became the third co-founder when Careem bought Jeddah-based address coding service Enwani two years later.
Uber and Careem were in preliminary talks to combine their Middle Eastern services, hoping to resolve a costly rivalry as Uber prepares for a public offering, Bloomberg reported on July 03, citing people familiar with the talks.
Ƶ’s sovereign wealth fund is a major investor in Uber, after acquiring a $3.5 billion stake in the company in 2016. Meanwhile Kingdom Holding and Saudi Telecom venture capital unit STV are also investors in Careem.
Careem hits one million drivers across region in race with Uber
Updated 03 September 2018
Careem hits one million drivers across region in race with Uber
- Careem operates in 100 cities across 14 countries.
- Ride hailing app expands across region