When 31-year-old Samir Shanny was growing up in West Bay, an area just north of this gleaming city's central zone, there were only a few tall buildings and none of them sparkled the way the Qatari capital's skyline has as host of the World Cup soccer tournament over the past month.
When 31-year-old Samir Shanny was growing up in West Bay, an area just north of this gleaming city's central zone, there were only a few tall buildings and none of them sparkled the way the Qatari capital's skyline has as host of the World Cup soccer tournament over the past month.