The government puts the number of guest workers in Saudi Arabia at more than six million—nearly half the kingdom's working-age population. Their ranks include an elite class of physicians, engineers, scientific researchers, and corporate managers, who are provided with luxurious housing, stratospheric salaries, and annual two-month paid vacations from their jobs in cities such as Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dhahran.
Places like Al Bahah, however, are the realm of thousands of Third World guest workers, an inexhaustible pool of truck drivers and factory hands, manual laborers and domestics, shop clerks and secretaries, who welcome the jobs that many young Saudis don't want.
The government puts the number of guest workers in Saudi Arabia at more than six million—nearly half the kingdom's working-age population. Their ranks include an elite class of physicians, engineers, scientific researchers, and corporate managers, who are provided with luxurious housing, stratospheric salaries, and annual two-month paid vacations from their jobs in cities such as Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dhahran.Places like Al Bahah, however, are the realm of thousands of Third World guest workers, an inexhaustible pool of truck drivers and factory hands, manual laborers and domestics, shop clerks and secretaries, who welcome the jobs that many young Saudis don't want.
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..