Online shopping threatens Syria's outdoor markets
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| Damascus, Syria
鈥 A local, slice-of-life story from a Monitor correspondent.
Up in Damascus鈥檚 Souk Salihiyah, the streets bustle with shoppers buying fresh produce. But Syria鈥檚 souks (marketplaces) have a new competitor: This spring, online food shopping made its debut in the country, already drawing 2,000 customers.
Foodleco.com caters to all possible culinary needs. As well as delivering goods to the customer鈥檚 doorstep, the site also offers delivery service from a range of restaurants.
The site 鈥 along with a limited but growing number of supermarkets 鈥 marks a break from traditional, daily shopping at the vegetable stalls and corner shops that dot nearly every street.
Impersonal online shopping and supermarket anonymity may not re-create the social fabric that is found in souks. But the new service caters to a growing workforce working longer hours. 鈥淸Foodleco.com] saves a lot of time,鈥 says Shaza Salem, a website administrator. 鈥淎nd it stops me [from] buying lots of things I don鈥檛 necessarily need.鈥
Foodleco.com highlights the rapid changes in Syrian society in which US-style conveniences are taking over traditional ways of life 鈥 but only for the upper classes. With only a very few households able to afford an Internet connection and credit cards, most of the population carries on in the souk as usual.
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