You order your meal online and want it at your doorstep immediately. The rush to get the meal could take a toll on the delivery man.
The boom in e-commerce and delivery businesses has left the delivery riders under enormous pressure. As the orders increase, the pressure mounts to deliver on time. And this causes accidents and road fatalities.
Dubai Police data revealed that 22 people were killed and 253 injured in road accidents involving bikes last year. In the first two months of the year, the police’s traffic department recorded 46 accidents that claimed three lives and left 47 injured.
Delivery service companies have been asked to educate riders about the importance of complying with traffic safety rules.

The Abu Dhabi Police said 162 accidents involving riders took place in 2019, which went up to 170 in 2020 and increased to 210 in 2021. Road fatalities rose from nine in 2019 to 13 in 2020.
Sumaya Saeed Al Neyadi, road safety section head at the Integrated Transport Centre (ITC), said: “In most cases, safety issues can be traced back to the riders and their driving behaviour. Delivery riders were spotted overtaking cars, not wearing proper protective equipment, speeding, working long hours resulting in fatigue and so on.”
A video shared by the ITC shows the violations committed.
Lt-Col Mohammed Alai Al Naqbi, director of the Traffic and Patrols Department at the Sharjah Police, reportedly said the most common traffic violation committed by motorcyclists was lane indiscipline.
Many programmes are being launched to teach the delivery riders to stick to traffic rules and some of them are also being rewarded for following the rules.