Zimbabweans in South Africa use app to send food home
after border restrictions
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[May 19, 2020] By
Emma Rumney and MacDonald Dzirutwe
JOHANNESBURG/
HARARE (Reuters) - Petronella
Mabhena, a domestic worker in South Africa, has been paying bus drivers
to ferry food to her relatives in Zimbabwe for over a decade.
As with many other families from Zimbabwe whose members depend on food
from South Africa, the supplies were abruptly halted when the two
countries restricted movement across their border in March to prevent
the spread of COVID-19.
"I was confused and did not know what to do," said Mabhena, 53, who
sends food to her mother and daughter.
A friend told her about an app that lets people in South Africa order
groceries for delivery in Zimbabwe, where prices for food and other
essentials have soared amid a severe economic crisis.
Use of the app called Malaicha - Ndebele slang for the traditional way
of sending goods over the border with bus and taxi drivers - surged in
April, said its managing director, Sayjil Magan.
While the border has been closed to people and the taxis and buses that
would normally ferry food informally, Malaicha is permitted to import
goods into Zimbabwe, offering an alternative.
About a year old, the app has yet to break even, in part because its
costs, including trucks and warehousing, are higher than the typical
digital startup.
But if its user base continues to grow, it could emerge as a rare winner
from South Africa's lockdown, one of the world's most restrictive.
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Previously, Malaicha handled an average of 20,000 to 30,000 orders a month,
Magan said, but that number increased by around 200% month-on-month in April,
while user numbers grew by around 100% to 75,000.
"It's something they are going to carry on using; that's the feedback that we
are getting from our customers," Magan said.
In Zimbabwe's capital Harare, one of five major cities where Malaicha operates,
deliveries reached 200 a day in April, from an average of 20 before the
lockdown, said warehouse manager Mario Ventouris.
Workers were putting in extra hours to clear long lines of people who had come
to collect orders, he added.
Delivery driver Decide Sabamba said his job was tougher than before: "It's busy,
it's busy every day."
He brought cooking oil and diapers to Mabhena's daughter, Epiphania Moyo, and
her baby - their first delivery via the app.
The family is all too familiar with the frustration of traditional malaicha
deliveries, which they said cost more and don't always arrive on time or in
full. Their experience with the app was different.
"They are very fast; they delivered everything. I will use it again," Moyo
added.
(Reporting by Emma Rumney in Johannesburg and MacDonald Dzirutwe in Harare;
Editing by Promit Mukherjee and Mike Collett-White)
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