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			 Aris Wahyudi, the founder of the newest motorcycle-sharing company, 
			reckons he has found a unique way to win business: not-so-smelly 
			drivers. 
			 
			"We took the decision to do an odor test for our customers' 
			satisfaction," Wahyudi said, speaking in a sweltering basement car 
			park, where prospective drivers are lining up to have their armpits 
			sniffed as part of a selection test. 
			 
			Dozens of companies have set up in Indonesia in the past year or so, 
			seeking to emulate the success of Go-Jek, the first local firm to 
			use smart phones to tap into the country's millions of traditional 
			motorcycle taxis, known locally as ojeks. 
			 
			There are now nearly 40 such firms operating in Indonesia, including 
			Malaysia's GrabBike, and local firms Ojeks Syari, which advertises 
			the Islamic credentials of its jilbab-wearing, women-only drivers, 
			and Limobike, which offer a deluxe service with Vespa-style 
			scooters. 
			
			  
			Endang Ahmad, 37, takes his job as a professional armpit-sniffer 
			very seriously. 
			 
			"I have already found many types of body odor smell," he says, 
			clutching a clipboard which he uses to score candidates as they 
			stand, arms outstretched, in front of a fan meant to simulate the 
			headwind of a motorcycle ride. 
			 
			"The ones who have sweat smell and armpit smell mixed we don't give 
			a pass." 
			 
			How to respond to the rapid expansion of ride-hailing services in 
			Indonesia, a mostly tropical, sticky country of some 250 million 
			people where public transport is patchy, has caused friction within 
			the government. 
			 
			Last month, President Joko Widodo overturned a ban on such services 
			only hours after his transport minister imposed it, amid a popular 
			outcry on social media. 
			
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			Wahyudi, a former electronic engineer who took money from friends, 
			family and investors to set up UberJek, which has no connection to 
			global car-sharing service Uber, says his company is the only one to 
			conduct such stringent smell checks. 
			 
			When the company launches in a month or two with some 3,000 drivers, 
			customers will be able to use the app to rate drivers based on their 
			smell. Drivers who accumulate too many negative reviews will get a 
			warning and could be suspended if they fail to scrub up. 
			 
			Muhammad Ali, 44, wants to supplement the salary he earns working in 
			a bank by driving a motorcycle taxi in the evenings. He has come 
			prepared for the odor test. 
			 
			"I have brought Rexona (deodorant) because, according to my wife, I 
			have smelly body odor," he said. "But I am really optimistic I can 
			pass all the tests today." 
			 
			(Editing by Michael Perry) 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
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