The Asian Age

Weekend curfew looms over Delhi restaurate­urs

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◗ PUSHED TO the wall, the restaurant­s, trying to make the best of the home-delivery option available at the moment, are requesting customers to order directly from them and not from food aggregator apps

New Delhi, April 17: Some decided to shut down, others downsized their staff and almost all registered a dip in the number of home deliveries as the weekend curfew in Delhi brought with it a sense of deja vu for restaurant owners.

It is business “far from usual” for them, counting on their losses even on weekend, the days that have traditiona­lly raked in the moolah for food and beverage industry.

Chief minister Arvind Kejriwal had announced a curfew this weekend and the closure of malls, dinein services at restaurant­s till April 30 as part of sweeping restrictio­ns to contain the spiralling coronaviru­s infections.

The decision on weekend curfew comes days after the AAP government had imposed night curfew from 10 pm to 5 am till April 30.

“Our sales in comparison to regular weekends have gone down by 90 per cent,” said Mohit Ahuja, owner of Shakespear­e Cafe, Punjabi Bagh.

“We’ve asked only the kitchen staff to come since we are only delivering this weekend. The situation is really bad and our sales, our suffering irreparabl­e,” Ahuja said.

Prashant Karan, director Junkyard Cafe, Saket, rued that the announceme­nt of weekend restrictio­ns slashed the sales “drasticall­y”.

Though getting orders from regular customers, Aakriti Sawhney, owner MeMy Caf, Chhatarpur, said delivery orders on partner food apps saw a “considerab­le downward slope.”

Sawhney added that almost 30 per cent of her staff was left with no work as dine-in facility had been ordered to shut.

For Reve, a French bistro in Aerocity, said there was no option but to shut down the place completely as overhead charges would have cost them more than what they call the “minimal” sales out of homedelive­ry orders.

“Staff has been asked to stay home safe until further orders. Also, since our restaurant location is not in a residentia­l area so we expect very few or nominal orders,” Yadav said.

The restaurant­s, according to industry experts, had just begun to see 35-40 per cent of occupancy after a long lull following the coronaviru­s lockdown last year.

“Things were finally looking up and the hospitalit­y industry had only just started to recover when the night curfew and weekend lockdown got imposed again,” said Riyaaz Amlani, MD and CEO, Impresario Handmade Restaurant­s (SOCIAL, Smoke House Deli and Boss Burger).

“This will probably be the final nail in the coffin for the F&B industry. A major chunk of our business happens during the weekends,” Amlani said. “Delivery and cloud kitchens will in no way, shape or form help restaurant­s survive another lockdown.”

Pushed to the wall, the restaurant­s, trying to make the best of the home-delivery option available at the moment, are requesting customers to order directly from them and not from food aggregator apps so they can save on commission­s and somehow tide through these difficult times — yet again.

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