Indonesian village turns unwanted trash into COVID helper
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[August 11, 2021]
By Prasto Wardoyo
TEMBOK GEDE, Indonesia (Reuters) - A
homemade robot designed by Indonesian villagers and scientists for fun
has found a new use during the pandemic - bringing food, and hopefully a
smile, to self-isolating residents who have contracted COVID-19.
An eclectic assembly of household items like pots, pans and an old
television monitor, it is now named the "Delta robot" in a nod to the
highly contagious variant of the coronavirus that has ripped through
Indonesia.
"With this new Delta variant and the surging number of COVID-19 cases, I
decided to turn the robot into one used for public services such as to
spray disinfectant, deliver food and meet the needs of residents who are
self-isolating," Aseyanto, 53, a neighbourhood leader who heads the
project, said.
The robot's head is made from a rice cooker, and it is operated by
remote control with a 12-hour battery life. It is one of several robots
made in the village of Tembok Gede, which has won a reputation for its
creative use of technology.
After trundling down the street to the home of an isolating resident,
its speaker emits the message "assalamu’alaikum" (Peace be with you),
followed by "A delivery is here. Get well soon."
The village lies within Surabaya, capital of East Java province and
Indonesia's second-biggest city, where a devastating second wave of
coronavirus infections has swept in over in the past month.
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Aseyanto, 53, a resident of the Tembok Gede neighbourhood, operates
the "Delta Robot", made from household items like pots, pans and an
old television monitor, in Surabaya, East Java province, Indonesia,
August 7, 2021. REUTERS/Prasto Wardoyo
Indonesia has become the epicentre of Asia's COVID-19
outbreak and recorded more than 3.68 million infections and more
than 108,000 deaths from the virus among a population in excess of
270 million spread across the vast archipelago.
"This Delta robot is very simple.... When we created this, we purely
used used materials in our neighborhood," said Aseyanto, who goes by
one name.
It is a far cry from the robots deployed in hospitality and for care
in Japan and elsewhere, some of which have been adapted to help
tackle the pandemic.
"For the base, we used a used toy car chassis," said another team
member, engineering lecturer Benazir Imam Arif Muttaqin.
(Writing by Ed Davies; editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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