Email Foreign Correspondent By Greg Wilesmith and Eric Campbell Updated July 15, 2015 09:38:16 Sorry, this video has expired Video: Foreign Correspondent takes a look inside the living quarters of Qatar 2022 workers. (ABC News) Photo: Foreign workers are being paid as little as $50 a week. (News Video) Related Story: Blatter launches attack on FIFA’s critics after re-election Related Story: Australia ‘disappointed’ at Blatter win, says FFA’s Lowy Related Story: Qatar World Cup will be played in winter: FIFA Related Story: Qatar risks losing World Cup without job reform Map: Qatar The corruption scandal engulfing world football’s governing body FIFA has cast a renewed spotlight on the conditions endured by hundreds of thousands of workers labouring on infrastructure for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. Qatar — the world’s richest country per capita — is spending $260 billion building the stadiums, public transport systems, freeways, hotels and apartments to stage the tournament. Yet foreign workers, mostly from South Asia, are being paid as little as $50 a week as the labour to build the infrastructure. Forced to live in squalid and unsanitary conditions, they work under a controversial system called kafala, which requires them to surrender their passports to…