Vanishing jobs for young could create 'lock-down generation'
JAMEY KEATEN and QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA, Associated Press GENEVA (AP) — Bashar Ali Naim used to work in a perfume and accessories store in Baghdad, earning $480 per week on average. About three months ago, the coronavirus outbreak swept into Iraq, and the 28-year-old father of two has been out of work ever since. “I am suffering a lot without work. I feel like a human with a body but no soul, especially