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Boss of local food delivery service run road, vendors report police...

TerrexLee

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nz-delivery-151018.jpg


SINGAPORE (THE NEW PAPER) - The owner of a local food delivery service has become uncontactable after apparently owing owners of several dozen food outlets thousands of dollars.

What To Eat, which started its business in 2013, vacated its office premises in Geylang about two weeks ago.

Its website and social media pages have also been shut down.

When The New Paper knocked at the last known home address of its director, Mr Benson Lo Kwang Meng, 40, in Whampoa on Tuesday (Nov 13), no one opened the door.

Three food business owners told TNP they are each owed thousands of dollars for food they delivered through What To Eat.

Mr Anthony Fok, 34, who owns Little Gobbles Cafe, said: "It has not paid us since we signed up with it in March, and now we can't contact it.

More at https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/food-delivery-service-owner-missing-fb-outlets-fume
 

syed putra

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What a job. Free scooters, free food taken from those that we delivered, plus can give milf,s sensual massage during deliveries.
 

jw5

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This small timer crook should be quite easily arrested if the authorities put their minds to it. :rolleyes:

nz-delivery-151018.jpg


SINGAPORE (THE NEW PAPER) - The owner of a local food delivery service has become uncontactable after apparently owing owners of several dozen food outlets thousands of dollars.

What To Eat, which started its business in 2013, vacated its office premises in Geylang about two weeks ago.

Its website and social media pages have also been shut down.

When The New Paper knocked at the last known home address of its director, Mr Benson Lo Kwang Meng, 40, in Whampoa on Tuesday (Nov 13), no one opened the door.

Three food business owners told TNP they are each owed thousands of dollars for food they delivered through What To Eat.

Mr Anthony Fok, 34, who owns Little Gobbles Cafe, said: "It has not paid us since we signed up with it in March, and now we can't contact it.

More at https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/food-delivery-service-owner-missing-fb-outlets-fume
 

kezgtree

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..And becoz they always support their own kind without first checking credentials...The herd mentality plays the biggest part in their community thus when 1 do it ...The rest will follow blindly...
 

whoami

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Asset
..And becoz they always support their own kind without first checking credentials...The herd mentality plays the biggest part in their community thus when 1 do it ...The rest will follow blindly...

Is in ur gene...too cheat.:roflmao:

Chinese students and their parents fight for the right to cheat

china-cheating-web.jpg


Earlier this month, ahead of notoriously difficult college entrance exams, an angry crowd of 2,000 parents and students descended on a high school in Hubei province to protest a new education policy that banned cheating. They smashed cars and chanted outside. According to the Telegraph’s report of the riot, one educator inside the school posted on a messaging service, “We are trapped in the exam hall. Students are smashing things and trying to break in.” At least one teacher was punched in the face (paywall).

The rift amounted to this: Metal detectors had been installed in schools to route out students carrying hearing or transmitting devices. More invigilators were hired to monitor the college entrance exam and patrol campus for people transmitting answers to students. Female students were patted down. In response, angry parents and students championed their right to cheat. Not cheating, they said, would put them at a disadvantage in a country where student cheating has become standard practice. “We want fairness. There is no fairness if you do not let us cheat,” they chanted.

The day’s protests sparked a broader debate about entrenched corruption in Chinese society. On the social media site Sina Weibo, a Chinese broadcaster, the Voice of China commented:

“Cheating isn’t what’s wrong. What’s wrong is when cheating becomes the standard. When people stop being ashamed of breaking the rules, and cheating becomes the unspoken rule and abiding by law becomes an alternative. What this society lacks isn’t just rules; society is an exam hall. Dreams depend on fairness and rules.”​
Nepotism and elitism among high-level officials and business heads has also served as justification for cheating. One blogger said, “Why can the leadership’s children cheat but the common people can’t?” Another blogger wrote (registration required), “When committing evil becomes a habit, of course it should become a right.”

The official stance appeared to soften following the protests. The local government said that “exam supervision had been too strict and some students did not take it well.”

https://qz.com/96793/chinese-students-and-their-parents-fight-for-the-right-to-cheat/
 

Hypocrite-The

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Loyal
From this so called owners account,,,,I realise that he is a bigger retard than I though he would be. Is he trying to elicit sympathy by such stupid comments? and another thing,,,if the supplier wasnt paid,,,why do they still continue fulfilling the delivery orders.? for me, within 1 month I will suspend services and use other platforms ,,,,,its not like he is the only game in town

'I've given up everything': What To Eat delivery service owner admits unable to pay F&B outlets
Mr Benson Lo said his beleaguered company owes multiple food and beverage outlets hundreds of thousands of dollars for food delivered through the service.
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
What To Eat's logo. (Photo: Facebook)
image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
By Aqil Haziq Mahmud
@AqilHaziqCNA
16 Nov 2018 06:30AM (Updated: 16 Nov 2018 01:49PM)
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SINGAPORE: The owner of a local food delivery service has acknowledged he is unable to pay eateries what he estimates could be hundreds of thousands of dollars owed for food that has been delivered, stating that poor business, high overheads and stiff competition has forced his company to shut down.
"Honestly, it’s not that I’m not trying to pay them - it’s really that I can’t do anything," What To Eat owner Benson Lo, 40, told Channel NewsAsia on Thursday (Nov 15). "I hope I can repay them but I really have no means."

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Mr Lo said he is focused on paying off staff salaries and larger chunks of his debt, and is looking to declare his company bankrupt. "If they want to sue the company, it’s really beyond my means," he added. "I will just leave it to (the bankruptcy process)."
F&B OUTLETS OUT OF POCKET
His comments come as dozens of food and beverage (F&B) outlets said they are owed money for food delivered through What To Eat, noting that the company has vacated its office and Mr Lo has been uncontactable. Some have left angry comments and scathing reviews online.
What To Eat is still listed by the Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority as a "live company", although its website and social media pages have been taken down. Mr Lo's office and mobile numbers are not in service.

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The Garden Slug owner Joseph Lim, 43, told Channel NewsAsia his company is owed at least S$700, with payments stopping in February. He last got a response in August.
"It’s very disappointing," he said. "Give people an idea when you want to pay them back, not just escape and hide. This is people’s hard-earned money."
A partner at Annabella Patisserie, who only wanted to be known as Mr Lau, said he has written off the S$1,000 he is owed, adding that he would not approach the authorities.
"Usually we try not to (contact the police)," the 38-year-old said. "We understand how other people feel if we do that. That’s how SMEs (small- and medium-sized enterprises) work."
While Mr Lau said he has been able to write off the debt due to the "manageable" cost price of his products, he acknowledged that other F&B businesses might not be able to.
"I’m more worried about customers paying money online then they don’t receive the product," he added. "They thought it’s the merchant, but actually we are not getting paid."
Nevertheless, Mr Lau said he believes What To Eat has run into financial problems and is "not running away".

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
The entrance to the building on Geylang Road that used to host What To Eat's office. (Photo: Aqil Haziq Mahmud)

Still, a shareholder of a hawker stall in northwest Singapore decided to take matters into his own hands. He said he managed to recover the S$1,000 he was owed by confronting Mr Lo at his office on Geylang Road and waiting at a coffee shop he thought was run by him.
"If he really has real financial difficulties, he should at least let us know and not avoid us," said the 30-year-old, who asked to be identified only by his initials KA. "Don’t wait until your so-called partners come and chase you until things turn sour, then you start to pay money."
"I'LL BE SPIT ON BY THEM"
It was at this coffee shop that Channel NewsAsia tracked down a weary-looking Mr Lo. He said he was renting a stall there as his only source of income to raise his three children.
Previous attempts to reach Mr Lo at his office proved unsuccessful, with the next-door tenant saying he had moved out and that people had come looking for him stating he owed them money.
"I’m really at the stage where I’ve given up everything," Mr Lo said after leaving a small room he was sleeping in at the coffee shop. "I sold all my personal things to pay off my staff’s salary."

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
The sign was empty and no-one was in at What To Eat's registered office on the third floor. (Photo: Aqil Haziq Mahmud)

While What To Eat showed promise after its launch in 2013 with more than 100 F&B partners, Mr Lo said orders started dwindling as investors pumped money into competitors like Foodpanda.
"We are local and it's hard to fight with them," he lamented, noting that his company also suffered a "big burn out" last year after its attempted expansion to Malaysia fell flat.
But the alarm bells really started to ring when Mr Lo discovered that the company owed a single business about S$100,000 after not paying them for almost a year and a half.
Mr Lo said he does not know how this happened, suggesting that it could be due to accounting issues with either party.
"During that time, they started asking debt collectors to disturb us," he said, adding that he was forced to use funds reserved for other establishments to settle the spiralling debt. "This big chunk that snowballed made me unable to sustain the business."
Mr Lo said he would be harassed by loan sharks at his office and at home, pointing out that it did not "look good".
"They’ve been very aggressively coming over," he said, adding that he would ask them for more time. "I told them this is a business thing; they shouldn’t come to my house."

image: data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==
The office building directory does not list What To Eat as a tenant. (Photo: Aqil Haziq Mahmud)

His biggest regret is not shutting shop sooner, although he said this was because he did not want to leave his employees stranded, almost all of whom, he said, were foreigners.
"During the end of September, I really struggled so much; I didn’t know whether I should stop," he said. "If I stop, (my staff) can't find jobs."
When asked why he had not gathered the F&B owners he owes money to in order to explain his situation, he replied: "I tell you, if I gathered them I’ll be spit on by them.
No one can guarantee that a business will succeed, added Mr Lo.
"Honestly, this is business," he said. "Trying to sustain this business has sucked me dry."
Source: CNA/hz
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Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...vice-owner-unable-to-pay-f-b-outlets-10933846
 

Hypocrite-The

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What To Eat food delivery company founder admits he’s unable to pay money owed to eateries
He said he has "given up everything".
Kayla Wong |
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November 17, 03:44 am
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The owner of a food delivery service in Singapore, who allegedly went missingrecently without paying eateries their share of revenue, has broken his silence.
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Wants to repay but can’t
Benson Lo, the owner of What To Eat food delivery service, told Channel NewsAsia on Thursday, Nov. 15 that he “really [has] no means” to repay the eateries the money he owes, even though he hopes to do so.
The amount he owes is estimated to be up to hundreds of thousands of dollars.
According to The New Paper, business owners told the paper the company started to delay payments since two years ago, and that Lo owes them thousands of dollars each.

Lo said he is currently trying to pay his staff their salaries, as well as a good portion of his debt.
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He is also planning to declare his company bankrupt:
“If they want to sue the company, it’s really beyond my means. I will just leave it to (the bankruptcy process).”​
Lo said his company closed down due to a lack of business, high costs, and tough competition.
Although What To Eat did relatively well when it first opened in 2013, securing more than 100 F&B partners, business faltered later on when investors chose to invest in competitors such as FoodPanda.
What To Eat, which has been deemed “permanently closed” on Google reviews, has an extremely low rating of 1.5 out of 5.
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“Given up everything”
Lo said he sold all his personal belongings to pay his staff their salaries:
“I’m really at the stage where I’ve given up everything.”​
He said he regretted not closing down his business sooner — he was reluctant to leave his employees without a job.
He added that his efforts to sustain this business has “sucked [him] dry”.
As to why he had not gathered the F&B owners to explain to them his situation, he said:
“I tell you, if I gathered them I’ll be spit on by them.”​
F&B outlet owners speak up
Joseph Lim, the 43-year-old owner of The Garden Slug, told CNA he felt disappointed when he failed to get a response from Lo on when he could get his payment.
Lo allegedly owes Lim’s company at least S$700.
One partner at another eatery, Annabella Patisserie, said he chose to write off the S$1,000 he was owed, and would not contact the police:
“We understand how other people feel if we do that. That’s how SMEs (small and medium-sized enterprises) work.”​
He added that he believes What To Eat ran into some financial difficulties and is “not running away”.
Not all owners view the situation the same way though.
A shareholder of a hawker stall, KA, confronted Lo directly by going to his office at Geylang Road and a coffee shop he thought was run by Lo.
He managed to recover the S$1,000 he was owed.
KA said Lo should not avoid the eatery owners if he has financial problems:
“Don’t wait until your so-called partners come and chase you until things turn sour, then you start to pay money.”​
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Police, CASE reports lodged
TNP reported that the Consumers Association of Singapore (CASE) said it has received a complaint about What To Eat.
The police also confirmed that a report has been lodged against the company.
Top image via What To Eat


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