The Sun (Malaysia)

Gazans get first taste of coffee-to-your-door service

-

WITH a practiced hand, a courier balances a tray of steaming cups and with the other grips his bicycle handlebars as he weaves between cars in the crowded Gaza Strip.

Shaaban Hamuda’s modest coffee on wheels business is giving the coastal Palestinia­n territory its first taste of a delivery service inspired by the likes of western techbased food delivery startups Uber Eats or Deliveroo.

Only here, there are no vividly-coloured bulky backpacks as is customary in Europe and North America, just a tray and a few cups of hot Arabic coffee, covered with foil to avoid splashing and cooling.

Hamuda, 31, a business management graduate, launched his two-wheeled hot drink service in May of this year, from his small stand near Rafah market, in the southern Gaza Strip.

A stove, a few saucepans and dozens of cardboard cups: everything to prepare cafe au lait, Arabic coffee and mint tea.

Customers only need to contact him on WhatsApp for one of his employees to prepare the order.

Then a delivery man gets on his cycle and rushes the steaming drink to the customer.

“People like what is new. I have received encouragem­ent from many people,” said Hamuda, who charges only for the beverage. Delivery is free.

“We use cycles to attract the attention of the public and it has proven to be effective,” he told AFP.

It was through watching YouTube that the father-of-two came across the trend of homedelive­ry meals by bicycle, a service that has grown popular worldwide.

The young entreprene­ur reports satisfacto­ry revenues, but said sales have fallen slightly since the outbreak of a second wave of Covid19 in the city.

The Gaza Strip, with an estimated population of two million, has been relatively spared by the pandemic, with just over 75 cases, one of whom has died.

But as elsewhere, the crisis has depressed economic activity in Gaza, where poverty and unemployme­nt rates are both above 50% of the total working-age population.

Not to mention that the coastal enclave has been under an Israeli-enforced blockade since 2007, the year the Islamist movement Hamas took power.

The smell of coffee

Ali Abu Jayab, one of the four deliveryme­n hired by Hamuda’s business, could not afford university studies because he comes from a poor family.

“There is no hope for young people in the Gaza Strip,” said the 25-year-old, who is delighted to have found work with Hamuda.

“Cycling is all about freedom of movement, it’s sport, it’s fun and free. It’s a good idea and people love it,” he said.

Sameh Juda, who owns a perfume shop, was seduced by the smell of Hamuda’s coffee.

“I started by ordering a small weekly coffee and now it’s one a day,” he said with a grin.

“Shaaban’s idea is good and innovative, and in addition it is very profitable since the bikes do not require fuel,” he said, adding that he appreciate­s the speed of delivery and ordering via the messaging app.

Despite crippling poverty in Gaza, “young people have innovative ideas that can enable them to find sources of income,” said Juda. – AFP-Relaxnews

 ??  ?? Hamuda makes coffee to deliver to customers, inside his small stand near Gaza’s Rafah market.
Hamuda makes coffee to deliver to customers, inside his small stand near Gaza’s Rafah market.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia