Kuwait City has no shortage of transport options for both tourists and business travelers. Although there are no trains, Kuwait has a well-developed road network and public transport is restricted to buses and taxis. Plans are in the process of building a railway network in the future, but at present, buses, cars or taxis are the only public transit means available in Kuwait.
Read moreKuwaitis like most countries these days prefer to use a mobile phone instead of a fixed landline. The number of cell phones in use is nearly five times the number of main lines installed in homes and these figures are growing.
Read moreStarted by Wilbur Hardee in 1960 in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, the burger chain provided customers with charbroiled hamburgers, quick service, and drive-thru lane. Hardee has since achieved immediate success, and the chain has expanded rapidly. In the 1970s and 1980s, Hardee 's locations proliferated as more and more franchise stores opened.
Read moreExpatriates living in Kuwait will now have to pay up to KD 1,700 per year-the equivalent of $5,593 to keep parents in the country.
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