The Phnom Penh Post

Disabled Malaysian gets big break in food delivery industry amid Covid-19

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DIMINUTIVE Malaysian delivery rider Muhammad Sidek Osman cuts a striking figure weaving through traffic on a modified fourwheele­d motorbike, on his way to drop off food.

Birth complicati­ons left him stooped and shorter than average at just 108cm, making even simple tasks such as climbing stairs a challenge.

“Being like this, it’s a bit hard to work – it’s a bit hard to do anything,” the 21-year told AFP at a delivery rider hangout on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur.

But on his modified motorcycle, Sidek becomes a different man – zipping from restaurant­s to people’s homes delivering food, with business booming as people stay home during the epidemic.

It has not been easy for the 21-year-old, who now works for the transport and delivery app Grab.

Employers repeatedly rejected him for full-time roles due to his disability, leaving him with little other option than to become a self-employed rider.

Sidek looks on the bright side, however, saying he enjoys his job “because you get to interact with other riders and customers”.

Riders with disabiliti­es are a rare sight in the Southeast Asian nation, home to an army of bikers tirelessly delivering items ordered on mobile apps.

But life in general is not easy for members of the disabled community as there is little in the way of infrastruc­ture – such as wheelchair access – to help them.

‘Can you work here?’

The government has not been proactive enough in protecting the rights of those with disabiliti­es, said V Murugesan, president of the Damai Disabled Person Associatio­n of Malaysia.

“The discrimina­tion will cease when the government makes necessary changes,” he said.

Sidek said he experience­d this first-hand.

After finishing school, employers rejected him for what he described as “normal” jobs – without giving further details – forcing him to take on piecemeal work.

During one interview, “they asked for someone tall”, he recalled. “They asked me: ‘Can you really work here?’”

Still, Sidek is not one to dwell on the past and is happy to have a steady income during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

He started working

as a delivery rider soon after Malaysia imposed a nationwide lockdown in mid-March, which saw many businesses closed and people confined to their homes for weeks.

“During t hese t i mes, i f you ca n work, just do whatever is ava i lable,” he sa id, adding t hat he ea rns up to 100 r inggit ($ 25) a day f rom del iver ies.

He is also convinced of the important role delivery riders are playing as Malaysia’s outbreak worsens, leaving people reluctant to head out to restaurant­s and shops.

The country recently re-imposed some restrictio­ns after a surge in coronaviru­s cases, and has so far reported more than 68,000 infections and over 360 deaths.

He said: “During this lockdown, we riders are frontliner­s because we take care of people by delivering food so that Covid cases won’t rise.”

 ?? AFP ?? Muhammad Sidek Osman is not one to dwell on the past and is happy to have a steady income during the coronaviru­s pandemic.
AFP Muhammad Sidek Osman is not one to dwell on the past and is happy to have a steady income during the coronaviru­s pandemic.
 ?? AFP ?? Muhammad Sidek Osman, a Grab food delivery man born disabled due to birth complicati­ons, carries orders towards his modified motorbike outside a restaurant in Gombak.
AFP Muhammad Sidek Osman, a Grab food delivery man born disabled due to birth complicati­ons, carries orders towards his modified motorbike outside a restaurant in Gombak.
 ?? AFP ?? Muhammad Sidek Osman inspects his modified motorbike as he arrives at a restaurant to meet friends.
AFP Muhammad Sidek Osman inspects his modified motorbike as he arrives at a restaurant to meet friends.

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