Khaleej Times

Residents report cancelled food delivery orders over ‘lack of riders’

- Nasreen Abdulla nasreen@khaleejtim­es.com

Restaurant­s in the UAE are facing difficulti­es finding riders from the country’s most popular delivery services Zomato and Talabat. Owned by Germanybas­ed Delivery Heroes, the two services jointly account for the lion’s share of delivery services in the UAE.

Social media posts suggest that some of the riders are refusing to work, demanding better wages.

In a statement, Talabat told KHALEEJ TIMES that it is “committed to ensuring riders can continue to rely on our platform to provide for their families, having decent stable gross monthly earnings of around Dh3,500 on average”.

“Until last week, rider pay satisfacti­on was well above 70 per cent, and we haven’t updated our payment model recently. We understand economic and political realities are changing constantly, and we will always continue to listen to what riders have to say,” the statement added.

The delivery services platform said refusing to work is not a “constructi­ve way to ask for improvemen­ts, and it is something that we strongly oppose, not to mention that it goes against the regulation­s of the UAE”.

Meanwhile, several restaurant­s appear either busy or closed on the app. The Talabat app displays a message that the company is expecting operationa­l delays. Some restaurant­s who are available for delivery are also facing issues.

“We got an order for delivery,” said Annu George, owner of a restaurant in Oud Metha, Dubai. “I have the food ready and I have been waiting for a delivery rider for over 1.5 hours. The dashboard says ‘Rider is 5 minutes away’ but nothing is happening. Neither the rider nor the account manager is responding.”

“This is a matter of great concern for us because if the food order is cancelled — which the customer will do if our order is late — Zomato will only refund 40 per cent of the total bill. And the customer who ordered will think it’s the restaurant’s fault and will most likely not order from us again.”

Several customers have been complainin­g about delivery delays.

“I ordered from a restaurant and waited for an hour,” said Parikshit. “When I called the restaurant, they said they were unable to find a rider. So I had to go and pick up the food myself.”

On Twitter @thezoeyyy complained about canceled orders: “What’s wrong with @Talabat? They are canceling all orders?!”

Some riders who got in touch with Khaleej Times complained that they have repeatedly approached their management for pay hikes but were not heeded. However, Talaabt claim that they periodical­ly conduct satisfacti­on surveys and always listen to the concerns of their riders.

Last week, riders of Deliveroo had refused to work after the company moved to cut their perdeliver­y commission. The British delivery giant then decided not to go ahead with the cuts.

We are committed to ensuring riders can continue to rely on our platform to provide for their families, having decent stable gross monthly earnings of around Dh3,500. — Talabat

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