China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Couriers go extra mile to support city in distress

-

XI’AN — Upon learning that couriers are needed in Shanghai while it fights its latest COVID-19 outbreak, Qi Shuailong, a courier for e-commerce enterprise JD in Xi’an, Shaanxi province, volunteere­d to lend a helping hand without hesitation.

China’s economic and financial hub, Shanghai is battling a resurgence of COVID-19 infections, with the city reporting a total of 535,600 confirmed and asymptomat­ic infections as of Tuesday, according to the city’s health commission.

With temporary closed-loop management in place to stem the spread of infections, residents have had to grapple with difficulti­es in purchasing groceries, which in turn put strain on local couriers due to a surge in online orders.

To ease the burden, JD has dispatched over 3,000 delivery workers from across the country to Shanghai in recent days, and Qi is one of them.

The 36-year-old courier, together with about 200 other delivery personnel from different provinces and regions including Shaanxi, Gansu, Ningxia, Qinghai and Xinjiang, rushed to Shanghai to help with packaging and the timely delivery of basic necessitie­s to the locals.

Their arduous working day typically begins at 6:30 am and ends at 9 pm. “Each delivery person handles around 200 parcels every day and the majority of goods are basic necessitie­s like rice, flour and milk,” Qi told Xinhua News Agency via a video link.

Due to the stringent anti-epidemic restrictio­ns, couriers are forbidden from the in-person delivery of parcels. Instead, they need to write down the customer’s name, room number, or building number on parcels which are then passed on to customers by community workers.

“Some residents have noticed that our phone numbers are from other cities, and they sent messages to express their gratitude for our assistance,” said Qi, noting that the kind gestures have greatly encouraged them.

These couriers have gone to extraordin­ary lengths to help out during the epidemic fight. The day Qi left Xi’an for Shanghai, his 3-yearold son underwent eye surgery. “As an ordinary logistics worker, I have volunteere­d to do my part,” Qi said.

Online food delivery platforms Meituan and Ele.me have also joined hands with the city authoritie­s to provide daily necessitie­s for the residents. Driverless vehicles have been deployed to ensure the contactles­s delivery of goods.

“The number of parcels delivered in recent days has been stabilized with a momentum of growth,” Bian Zuodong, a senior official with the State Post Bureau, told a news conference on Tuesday, adding that more efforts will be made to ensure the last-kilometer delivery of supplies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States