The company is reviewing “the possibilities of operating in the lockdown,” chief corporate affairs officer Rajneesh Kumar told CNN Business.
“We are prioritizing the safety of our delivery executives and seeking the support of the local governments and police authorities to meet the needs of our customers,” he said in a statement, without elaborating further.
Amazon told CNN Business it was “working with the central government and local authorities, asking them to help us urgently with detailed on-ground operating procedures.”
Mixed messages
Zomato, a popular food delivery startup, said its delivery workers were “facing several hurdles across cities while trying to deliver food.”
It pointed out that its work had been classified as an essential service, but said that “coordinating with multiple local authorities is … challenging.”
“The government has provided strong guidance which we are adhering by and trying our best to execute on the ground,” a company spokesperson told CNN Business. “We are communicating with the relevant authorities and hoping these issues are sorted soon.”
At least some confusion appears to stem from warehouse closures. The online supermarket Grofers
saidTuesday on Twitter that its warehouse in the northern city of Faridabad had been closed by local law enforcement, and that it was facing “operational challenges due to a lack of clarity in our listing as an essential service provider.”
K K Rao, commissioner of police in Faridabad, told CNN Business that while they are not stopping e-commerce services, they are briefing factory workers about social distancing requirements. He said that meant some factories were “temporarily shut by the police in order to brief employees.”