Sept. 18: We Have Gas, But No Pumps
When the 10-man crew of the Saadoun Street gas station arrived at work
this morning, they found the electricity off, and the station's generator out of
commission. Half went home, and the other five decided to hang around and hope
for some way to make a little money.
The state oil ministry owns most of Iraq's gas stations. The
stations' managers are fulltime staff members who are now getting solid $120
paychecks backed by the U.S. occupation authorities. But the guys who pump gas are,
"temporary" workers who get 15 (24-hour) shifts a month for the equivalent of
50 cents each. They can score $2-3 per workday in tips if the electricity
stays on the whole time, and they sell gas to black markets for a cut of the
profits (maybe another $2).
The power came on at 8 a.m. For three hours, the crew hustled drivers to
the one pump (of four) that is in working order - and they made maybe 50 cents
each in tips before the electricity moved on to some other part of Baghdad.
After many years here, Marwan Mahmoud Mohammed is the crew chief - and
still a "temporary" worker. With the power out at midday, he sits soberly
dragging on a cigarette and re-reading an order from the oil ministry. Stations are
to stop pumping gas into containers, a rule meant to halt the supply to the
black market guys.
One of Marwan's main black market clients is Ali, a guy in his 30s whose
weightlifter's muscular bulk is starting to sag into fat. Ali used to be in
Saddam Hussein's army, but he deserted, then got caught and did a year in prison.
He lives near the gas station and is like one of its crew; since the war, he
has helped guard it at night to keep looters out. Now he is slumped glumly on
the broken sofa in the office, wearing a dirty T-shirt (like half the clothes
in Iraq, a castoff from America) that advertises "Ibelieve.com - your link to
the Christian life."
Marwan is sympathetic. "Now I can't sell to Ali anymore," he says. "They
[the oil ministry] would fire me in a second if they caught me." Ali is a nice
guy and a friend, Marwan says - not nuts like some of these other black market
guys. Some, when I refuse them, are going to think I'm trying to cut them
off. They won't believe there's an order, and they'll threaten to kill me."
Ali lights a cigarette, too. He doesn't know what he'll do for money now -
for himself or his two kids. So his mind drifts to the other thought that has
occupied him in the five months since the Americans came. Ali's brother was
imprisoned and killed under Saddam, Ali says, denounced by a Baath Party member
who still lives not far away. "I've been thinking of killing him," Ali says.
Now, if nothing else, he'll have the time.
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