Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - What is the specific situation of Xinjiang Corps Construction Engineering Group's operation in Angola? Please give a more specific and detailed reference.
What is the specific situation of Xinjiang Corps Construction Engineering Group's operation in Angola? Please give a more specific and detailed reference.
I have answered the following questions for other students, and now I copy them to you, hoping to help you.
I graduated on 20 1 1. I signed an employment agreement with Beixin Construction Engineering Co., Ltd., and originally went to Angola with a bright vision. I thought that as long as we worked hard, the company would not mistreat us fresh graduates, but the result was disappointing. ...
I studied architecture, and when I first went, I was assigned to a farm (and several colleagues also studied architecture). I live in a container, the temperature is over 40 degrees, but there is no air conditioning in it. During the day (around 9: 00 am to 5: 00 pm), the temperature of the dormitory (container) must not be lower than 43 degrees Celsius (measured by colleagues with a thermometer), and you can't take a lunch break in the big tree outside the camp at noon (if you have time). However, we are on the farm and hardly go back to camp at noon. The unit will send a car (a car that has long been scrapped in China) to send rice to the ground in plastic buckets (it makes me sick to think of a bucket full of rice now). It was said that we would get off work at 6 pm, but the company sent a car to pick us up at around 7 pm. Almost every time I go back, it will get dark. We will continue to work in the office after supper. No matter what you do, many offices have regulations that you are not allowed to rest before 10: 30 in the evening, and some even later. For example, in our office, we can't go back to the dormitory until 1 1: 00. Go to work at 6 am, and fast people usually get up around 5:40.
Tell me about the work content:
1, unloading (to put it bluntly, it is a heavy physical porter). We unloaded wood with black people (the company stole wood and was finally reported by local black people. The local government caught us red-handed and fined us a lot. On that day, many policemen came to the camp, all armed with rifles, surrounded the camp, and finally even the next branch of the company engaged in wood was dissolved.
2. Land reclamation and land leveling. With a few colleagues and a few niggers, with several bulldozers, excavators, forklifts, graders, the first four and the last eight tractors, the only technical thing is leveling, leveling with a level or total station;
3, rework (can be said to be nonsense). If you don't lead a new job in Beixin, you won't have so many ideas and opinions. The leader said that one is one and two is two. If he is wrong, you should do it again and put the blame on him (this is the virtue of farms and buildings, not that I am talking nonsense here, I worked in buildings at last, which is the knowledge of my colleagues). Rework is a major feature of Beixin!
4. Agriculture. This is because students who study agronomy do it with state workers and black workers. I don't know how they were planted, so I won't talk about it here, but every time they come back with us, their clothes and faces are almost like niggers, and the black soil and plant ash covered with clothes are even more gaunt than us.
5. Fatal disease (malaria). When I went to Angola, people who didn't get malaria were really lucky. I caught a cold two or three times a year at most in China, but after staying in Angola for half a year, I still got malaria unfortunately. The traffic in Angola is very inconvenient. At that time, I found that my fever was above 39 degrees, so I called the leader and said that I might have been abused because I really couldn't do the work. Then I waited for a long time, waiting for the company to send a car to take me to the hospital ... After waiting for four hours, the car arrived (it was a vegetable cart with no glass in the window). It was already past 10 in the evening, and then I was sent to the car by my colleagues. The wind whistling outside blows into the car (the temperature difference in Angola is quite large, more than 40 degrees during the day, and it will suddenly drop to about 15 degrees at night), and it is already 1 o'clock in the morning when we arrive at the company clinic. The "doctor" (I finally learned that she was actually a nurse) fell asleep, and then asked a few simple questions without checking (listening and asking the intermediate questions). Then a week of medication and infusion treatment (the company contract stipulates that malaria examination and treatment are free, and the company basically did it). The treatment of malaria always hurts the stomach, and the most terrible thing is the kidney. After a week of treatment, I feel that my kidney hurts terribly and I can hardly eat anything ... I'm fine. I have malaria once a year. In our department, three colleagues take turns every month. Malaria can't be cured and may recur at any time. Although hepatitis B can't be cured at present, it is much more terrible than hepatitis B. Plus malaria, doctors say that if it is not treated in time, it will die within 8 hours. Therefore, although I have returned to China, I still have to prepare antimalarial drugs (those who come back from Angola should be prepared for malaria treatment at any time unless they put life and death at risk) ... because I don't want to die. ...
6. Escape from Tibet. Because our visa is divided into two types: work visa and business visa, which will expire soon, the company will not reissue our visa in order to save money, in exchange for the fate to be mentioned below. Because the influence of China people in Angola is not very good (in fact, it is very poor), so niggers like to rob and kill people when they meet China people, and so do some sb in the local immigration bureau. On 20 1 1 twelfth lunar month, a group of sb from immigration came to our camp. At that time, we were in a meeting, and someone outside called the immigration people to come, but our sb leaders ignored us, waiting for the immigration to rush into the yard, and the leaders panicked and began to run around. In the Woods and cornfields, we ran like hell, and some colleagues lost their shoes, followed by niggers. For the next two months (the Chinese people are celebrating the New Year), we hid almost every day and were afraid to go back to the camp or dormitory at night. We just sat in the sheepfold and cowshed until dawn ... Although we have now returned to the motherland, we have been awakened by nightmares several times, and my heart is almost broken here ... I really don't know why a company like Beixin has not been cursed.
……
Alas, there are many unexpected things in Beixin, such as inhuman management, inhuman working hours and working environment, and inhuman life ... Well, I won't say much. With a heavy heart, I will tell my brothers and sisters what Beixin is like according to my personal experience for one year. I hope it's useful to everyone ... good luck!
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