India delivery man sacked for eating food sparks sympathy
The sacking of a food delivery man in India after he was filmed eating a
client's food and resealing the containers has sparked a conversation
about the delivery industry in the country. The BBC finds out more.
The video, which was filmed in Madurai in southern India, shows the
delivery man, who is wearing a T-shirt from popular Indian food delivery
app Zomato, eating food out of boxed orders then resealing them and
putting them back into a delivery bag.
Initially met with disgust, anger and ridicule, the video was watched thousands of times.
The social reactions prompted Zomato, India's biggest food delivery
company, to react with a statement that they took "food tampering very
seriously".
"We have spoken to him at length and while we understand that this was a
human error in judgement, we have taken him off our platform," the
company added.
However, with the news that Zomato had decided to terminate the
employment of the unidentified delivery man, the conversation began to
turn more sympathetic.
Many pointed to long work hours, difficult conditions and poor pay as serious issues faced by delivery employees.
Some delivery people the BBC spoke to described similar problems.
"Earlier we used to get 60 rupees [85 cents] per delivery. Then from 60
it became 40. Still I continued because I had to educate my children.
Now the company is planning to make it 30 rupees per delivery. But I
have expenses - petrol is expensive, I have children as well. Tell me
what should I do?" one delivery person, who did not want to be
identified, told the BBC.
Another said "I am the sole bread earner in my family. In case I have an
accident, I don't have an insurance policy. The company doesn't give us
insurance either. If there is a mishap then I will be in trouble. The
company should think about that."
App-based delivery is a relatively new business in India, but has seen huge levels of growth in a short time.
Apart from food, Indians can now also order things like groceries and
even furniture to be delivered to their homes. Retail delivery giants
like Amazon and Flipkart, which was recently acquired by Walmart, also
employ tens of thousands of people to act as delivery staff.
With an estimated six to eight million people joining the Indian
workforce every year and with jobs not growing anywhere close to that
rate, many people are willing to accept even menial jobs with
exploitative work conditions just so that they earn some level of
income.
Zomato says it employs around 150,000 delivery people across India,
while Swiggy, another food delivery app, said it has around 100,000
active delivery partners at any given time.
While many companies do not share specifics of how much they deliver
every month, Zomato recently put out a statement which claimed that they
were receiving around 21 million food orders every month. There is no
overall financial estimation of how much the industry is worth.
However, both Swiggy and Zomato have denied that they ask their delivery
partners to meet unreasonable deadlines or impose fines on those who do
not meet "targets".
"All our delivery partners are independent contractors and choose to
login (when and for as long as they want to) as per their own will for
delivering food through our platform. They are free to go offline and
come back online after any duration (be it an hour, day or week). Hence,
all partners are advised to go offline when they want to take a break,"
a representative from Zomato told the BBC.
Both companies also said that they provided their delivery people with benefits like insurance.
One delivery person, who only wanted to be identified by his first name,
Deepak, confirmed that he has never been penalised for taking a break.
But with companies hiring more and more delivery people, it was getting
harder for him to earn more money and customers almost never tipped, he
said.
He also told the BBC that he had seen the video of the Zomato delivery person, but said he had "no sympathy" for him.
"Wrong is wrong. Where is the question of sympathy? He shouldn't have
done this. If someone gave you jhoota [half-eaten] food would you eat
it?"
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