Protests are good business


A number of food traders with commercial operation smarts raked it in during Bersih 3.0, yet a couple of positively didn't.
COMMENT
On a sunrise of Apr 28, most restaurants as well as stalls in parts of Kuala Lumpur were unexpected beset by thousands of yellow-shirted protesters. Motivated by hunger as well as watchful for a Bersih 3.0 sit-in convene to start, they quickly done a direct route for these places.
Scores of people were seen in a Chinatown area, kindly backing up by a roadside in a bid to squeeze breakfast.
Some hawkers pushed trolleys laden with ice-cold H2O bottles as well as isotonic drinks by a crowds; a god-sent in a scorching weather.
By late morning, a McDonalds nearby a Kota Raya shopping centre was so heavily alive which a assistant had to act as a temporary bouncer, letting congregation in as well as out a doors carefully.
It was great as well as brisk commercial operation for traders who chose to open which day, given most protesters went by their personal reserve in a wink of an eye.
No doubt, most of these businesses suffered after tear gas as well as H2O cannons were fired in to a crowds later on.
Stores had to slam their shutters as well as tighten their doors, whilst hawkers had to close their stalls when a police intent with protesters in travel battles over a next 4 hours.
There was a mess of spilled cendol upon Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman, trampled by both citizens as well as a authorities alike.
Even so, quite a couple of eateries one after another to work even as tear gas clouds rolled down a streets.
A mamak grill nearby ! a Dang W angi police station was jam-packed with people demanding drinks as well as fried noodles.
Business was great there, with servers feverishly offered packets of Teh-O-ais, Milo ais as well as whatnot to passersby (the writer included) who couldn't find an dull chair to sit.
'Barrels of beer sold'
Legend has it which a sure beer hall in a area even sole off several barrels-worth of beer to parched protesters wanting a postpone from a day's events.
Many a convenience store had barricaded their doors, yet some cashiers were some-more than peaceful to hand over canned drinks for a couple of Ringgit by small openings.
Some mobile ice-cream sellers doled out orange-flavoured popsicles as well as Cornetto lookalikes, even as riot police collected a couple of hundred metres away.
As a movement died down towards a evening, stores began to re-open as well as hawkers went back to cooking.
They were of march visited by a thousands of hungry people lingering in a protest's aftermath.
How most grill owners as well as hawkers found their businesses crushed as well as burnt by looters which day? If there were any, we would have listened about it by now.
Of course, you can't design traders to not be apprehensive when tens of thousands of people march by their stores. Even some-more so when protesters fight with a police upon a streets.
We've all listened stories of looters using amok in alternative countries, grabbing, violation as well as blazing where they can. But KL today is not a London or a Cairo of 2011. (Most) people here paid for their food upon Apr 28, otherwise withdrawal businesses alone.
So what is this explain of hundreds of thousands of Ringgit which some traders supposedly lost?
If these burger-fryers showed a bit of commercial operation acumen, closed as well as non-stop their stalls at a right times, they would! have wa lked divided with something alternative than an alleged total loss.
But they chose not to, as well as motionless which increase could be better done by frying for free in front of somebody's house.
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