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How is the salary for construction workers in the Xinjiang Corps?
I will tell you from personal experience something about the Xinjiang Beixin construction project that few outsiders know.
I have already answered what I want to say below for other students. Now I will copy the content to you. I hope it will be helpful to you.
I graduated in 2011 and signed an employment agreement with Beixin Construction. I originally went to Angola with great expectations, thinking that as long as I worked hard, the company would not treat us freshly graduated college students badly. , but the result was very disappointing...
I majored in architecture and was assigned to a farm when I first arrived (there were several colleagues who also majored in architecture). I lived in a container and the temperature was over 40 degrees Celsius. It’s so hot that there is no air conditioning inside. During the day (from about 9 a.m. to about 5 p.m.) the temperature inside the dormitory (container) is definitely not lower than 43 degrees Celsius (colleagues once measured it with a thermometer), and there is no lunch break (if there is one) It was time for a lunch break) so I had no choice but to make do for a while under the big tree outside the camp. However, we were on a farm, and we almost never returned to the camp at noon. Our work unit would send trucks (vehicles that have long since been scrapped in China) to deliver the meals to the fields in plastic buckets (now I feel sick when I think of the buckets containing rice). In the afternoon, we were told to get off work at 6 o'clock, but it was already around 7 o'clock when the company sent a car to pick us up. Almost every time we went back, it would be dark. After dinner, we would continue working in the office. No matter what you do, many offices have it. According to the regulations, you are not allowed to rest before 10:30 pm, and some are even later. For example, in our office, you can only go back to the dormitory to sleep after 11:00. People who go to work at 6 a.m. usually wake up around 5:40.
Let’s talk about the job content:
1. Unloading trucks (to put it bluntly, they are heavy-duty porters). We unloaded wood with black people (the company secretly cut down the wood, and the local black people finally reported it. The local government caught them and fined them a lot. Many police came to the camp that day, all armed with rifles, and surrounded the camp. Finally, Even a timber branch of the company was dissolved);
2. Open up wasteland and level land. Together with a few colleagues and a few niggas, we brought a few bulldozers, excavators, forklifts, graders, and earth-moving vehicles with four in the front and eight in the back to open up wasteland and level the land. The only thing that had a little bit of technical content was the leveling. Use a level or total station to level;
3. Rework (it can be said to be nonsense). In Beishingan, you don't have to have so many ideas and opinions just because you are a leader. If the leader says one thing, it means one, and if he says two things, it means two. If he is wrong, you will go back to work, and you will be blamed for it (this is a moral principle in farms and construction. I am not just talking nonsense here. In the end, I went to work in construction. Yes, and this is the common knowledge of colleagues). Rework is a major feature in Beixin!
4. Farming. This is because the students who studied agriculture led the national workers and illegal workers to do this. I don’t know very well how they farm, so I won’t go into it here. But every time they come back with us, they are dressed with dignity. They are almost like black ghosts, their heads, faces and clothes are covered with black soil and plant ash, and they are even more haggard than us;
5. Deadly disease (malaria). When you go to Angola, those who don’t suffer from malaria are really lucky. I only get colds two or three times a year in China, but unfortunately I still got malaria six months after I was in Angola.
The transportation in Angola is very inconvenient. When I found out, I had a high fever of over 39 degrees. I couldn’t work anymore, so I told my boss that I might have been abused. Then I waited for a long time, waiting for the company to send a car to take me to the hospital... After waiting for a full 4 hours, the car arrived (it was a car that brought food, and the car windows had no glass). It was already past 10 o'clock in the evening, and then I was put on the car by my colleagues. The car was bumpy all the way, and outside The wind blew into the car (the temperature difference in Angola is quite large, more than 40 degrees during the day, and drops to about 15 degrees at night). It was already past 1 o'clock in the morning when we arrived at the company's clinic. "Doctor" (finally I Only then did I realize that she was actually a nurse.) She was in a daze, and then she asked a few simple questions without checking her (it was a to-the-point question, I guess). Maybe it was because the doctor was highly qualified and well-informed, so they concluded that I had malaria, and then It is just a week of medication and infusion treatment (the company contract stipulates that malaria examination and treatment are free, and the company basically complies with this). The treatment of malaria hurts the stomach, and the most terrible thing is that it hurts the kidneys. After treatment, A week later, I felt that my kidneys were in terrible pain, and I could hardly eat... I was lucky. I only got malaria once a year. In our department, three colleagues took turns to get malaria twice in a month. One of my friends was already thin, but after he finally got treatment for malaria, he became so thin that it was scary. Malaria cannot be cured and may relapse at any time. Although hepatitis B cannot be cured at present, it is much scarier than hepatitis B. I got malaria and heard the doctor say that if I didn't get timely treatment, I would die within 8 hours. Therefore, although I have returned to China, I still have to prepare malaria medicine (anyone who comes back from Angola must have malaria medicine ready at all times, unless he puts life and death at risk)...because I don't want to die...
6. Escape from hiding in Tibet. Because our visas are divided into two types: work visas and business visas, they will expire soon, and the company will not reissue visas for us in order to save this money. What we get in exchange is the fate described below. Because the influence of the Chinese in Angola is not very good (in fact, it is very bad), so black people like to rob and kill Chinese people when they see them, and the same goes for some sbs at the local immigration bureau. On the 20th day of the twelfth lunar month in 2011, a group of agents from the Immigration Bureau came to our camp. We were in a meeting at that time. Someone outside shouted that someone from the Immigration Bureau was coming, but our immigration leaders ignored them and waited for the Immigration Bureau to rush in. In the yard, the leaders panicked and started running around. In the woods and cornfields, we ran as hard as we could. Some colleagues even lost their shoes. Behind them were the roars and gunshots of niggas. Finally, we were arrested for ten several. In the next half month (the people of the motherland were celebrating the Spring Festival), we hid here and there almost every day. We didn't dare to go back to the camp or the dormitory at night. We just sat in the sheepfold and cowshed until dawn... Although Now I have returned to my motherland, but I have been awakened by nightmares several times. My heart almost breaks when I talk about this... I really don’t know why a company like BNBM is not punished by God?
……
Hey, there are many things in Beixin that you can’t think of, such as inhumane management, inhumane working hours and working environment, and inhumane life... ...Okay, I won’t say any more. With a heavy heart, I will just use my own personal experience of one year to tell my fellow students what it’s like to be in Beixin. Hope this is useful to you all...good luck!
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