China’s Ele.me to deliver food from 100 restaurants to frontline medical staff in Wuhan amid coronavirus outbreak
- Ele.me as well as rival Meituan previously suspended food deliveries to some hospitals in Wuhan affected by the coronavirus outbreak
- It has resumed some deliveries to medical staff at local hospitals from an initial list of restaurants
Chinese food delivery service giant Ele.me has gathered 100 restaurants to prepare food for frontline medical staff in Wuhan, the epicentre of the coronavirus outbreak, after previously suspending food deliveries to hospitals in the city to prevent the spread of the epidemic.
The first batch of restaurants under the initiative, including global fast food chains McDonald’s and Burger King as well as local eateries in Wuhan, have already taken food delivery orders from over 10 local hospitals, according to a post published on the official WeChat account of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group on Tuesday. Alibaba, which owns Ele.me, is also the parent company of the South China Morning Post.
An Ele.me rider safely delivered the first order to frontline medical staff on Sunday, Alibaba said, adding that 270 meals were delivered to doctors and nurses at Wuhan’s Xiehe Hospital, No 6 Hospital and Zhongnan Hospital the next day.
Chinese tech firms pitch in with funds to fight Wuhan coronavirus
The government is sending medical teams from across the country to the epicentre of Wuhan in Hubei province, which has been the worst-hit by the epidemic, and at least 15 Chinese cities have been put on lockdown as the virus spreads outward from the provincial capital.
Companies are accordingly stepping up efforts to meet daily supply needs from the growing number of medical personnel involved.
Aside from Ele.me, other Alibaba-operated platforms such as food and lifestyle unit Koubei and travel service Fliggy have pledged to supply Wuhan city’s medical staff with local services including convenience stores for fresh produce, the statement said, calling for more local merchants to join the initiative.
Other Meituan initiatives include providing 1,000 free takeaway meals every day for medical staff at hospitals in Wuhan and providing medical staff in China’s central Hubei province with free use of 300,000 shared bicycles.
Last week, Alibaba also announced a 1 billion yuan fund to purchase medical supplies from across China and overseas for hospitals in Wuhan, while social media giant Tencent Holdings donated 300 million yuan from its charity to buy facial masks and other medical supplies for people.