The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

As Dubai’s food delivery booms, dangers and casualties mount

- By Isabel Debre

DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES » Running late, the delivery driver threaded his motorcycle around lurching cars, speeding against time and traffic to satisfy a customer’s burger craving — the day’s last delivery in Dubai.

Moments later, a car sideswiped him.

The collision catapulted Mohammed Ifran off his bike and smashed him into the street, instantly killing the 21-year-old as he was delivering a meal worth some $8. After giving up farming in Pakistan, he had been working in Dubai as a contractor for Talabat, an online food delivery app popular in the United Arab Emirates.

“His family’s only source of happiness, gone,” said a fellow courier in the workingcla­ss district of Deira, who declined to give his name for fear of reprisals.

Ifran’s June death represents just one in a growing number of casualties among food delivery riders in Dubai, workers and advocates say, as the pandemic pushed millions of people indoors and accelerate­d a surge in appbased orders.

The boom has transforme­d Dubai’s streets and stores and drawn thousands of desperate riders, predominan­tly Pakistanis, into the high-risk, lightly regulated and sometimes-fatal work. With most paid between $2 to $3 per delivery rather than a fixed salary, riders race in the scorching heat to keep pace with a relentless rush of orders.

The conditions of couriers worldwide, long perilous, worsened during the pandemic as riders became essential to feeding cities and faced new risks of coronaviru­s exposure. But in Dubai, the United Arab Emirate’s glimmering sheikhdom that runs on low-paid migrant labor from Africa and Asia, the job can be particular­ly precarious.

At the mercy of visa sponsors, workers in Dubai have few protection­s. To reduce cost, companies like Londonbase­d Deliveroo outsource bikes, logistics and responsibi­lity to contractin­g agencies — a labor pipeline that prevails across Gulf Arab states and can lead to mistreatme­nt.

“For food delivery riders in the UAE, the issue of exploitati­on is usually on the part of the sponsor. That’s where people feel they’re unable to change jobs or even to complain about working conditions,” said Karen Young, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Middle East Institute.

On Dubai’s streets, more than a dozen delivery riders interviewe­d said they knew of two or three co-workers killed every month. Memories of colleagues sprawled on the street in shredded uniforms and bloodied helmets remain vivid as they mount their bikes each morning, many said.

Dubai police have not yet released a road crash count for 2020. Past tallies did not offer breakdowns for motorcycle deaths. Authoritie­s declined to offer recent figures or comment on crash cases like Ifran’s.

Without an official number, advocates have scoured local media to gauge the work’s hidden toll. One road safety activist, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals, collected press reports of at least 70 delivery riders hospitaliz­ed last year in Dubai, including 24 who died.

The figure, although likely an undercount, “is intense” for Dubai during a year that kept most residents off the roads, he said. The entire country recorded 448 crash deaths in 2019.

State-linked Emirati newspaper The National reported that 12 delivery drivers were killed during the city’s lockdown in April alone, quoting a police official as saying, “When money comes into the equation, safety is put aside.”

Couriers in Dubai often lack protective gear and adequate safety training, industry experts said, with riders uneducated about critical motorcycle maneuvers like the blind-spot check. Helmets are often worn incorrectl­y. Contractor­s allocate just $27 a month for bike servicing — a small sum for a bike’s necessary oil changes and brake, tire and plug maintenanc­e.

In response to questions from The Associated Press, Dubai’s Roads and Transporta­tion Authority said safety remains the government’s “top priority” as it supports the delivery market’s explosive growth. Authoritie­s referred to recently announced regulation­s, including penalizing riders’ use of the fast lane, requiring cooling towels and reducing riding radius.

Riders for two main companies, Deliveroo and Talabat described receiving limited insurance coverage from third-party contractor­s, with payouts often capped at a few hundred dollars with no death benefits or crash compensati­on. Several riders struck by cars on delivery trips said their contractor­s refused to foot hefty Dubai hospital bills, instead forcing them to fly back to Pakistan to pay for cheaper surgery.

Uae-based Talabat, which saw its deliveries increase by 100% in the first half of the year, said the platform has “a very high standard” for rider training and ensures contractor­s provide insurance for medical care as required by law. The company, owned by Germany-based Delivery Hero, has introduced a taskforce of the best riders, it said, “who help to ensure that our

fleet across the UAE continue to adhere to the safety rules.”

 ?? JON GAMBRELL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A delivery driver for the app Deliveroo speeds through a roundabout, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Thursday, Sept. 9, 2021. Advocates and workers say that casualties among food delivery riders are mounting in the city of Dubai, as the pandemic accelerate­s a boom in customer demand. The trend has transforme­d Dubai’s streets and drawn thousands of desperate riders, predominan­tly Pakistanis, into the high-risk, lightly regulated and sometimes-fatal work.
JON GAMBRELL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A delivery driver for the app Deliveroo speeds through a roundabout, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Thursday, Sept. 9, 2021. Advocates and workers say that casualties among food delivery riders are mounting in the city of Dubai, as the pandemic accelerate­s a boom in customer demand. The trend has transforme­d Dubai’s streets and drawn thousands of desperate riders, predominan­tly Pakistanis, into the high-risk, lightly regulated and sometimes-fatal work.

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