New York Times   December 3, 2003
SHORTAGES
Oil-Rich Baghdad Asks Why It Waits Hours in Gas Lines
By EDWARD WONG

BAGHDAD, Iraq, Dec. 2 - Gasoline fuels fires. The lack of it can do the same.

Ask Hadi Ali, 58, a civil engineer and irate car owner. He had been
waiting an hour on a recent morning to fill his gas tank by the time
his car finally crept up to the pumps. The line behind him was 110
cars long.

"We were expecting the American forces to come here and provide us
with things, to make everything better," he said as he stared out the
windshield of his maroon Peugeot sedan. "We are a rich country. We
have oil. But nothing is happening."

For the past two weeks, motorists in this traffic-choked city have
waited up to half a day just to fill their tanks, after several
months of more modest lines. The problem, officials say, is mainly
from guerrilla attacks on northern oil pipelines.

Some taxi drivers have spent alternate days getting gas rather than
working. What is more, the high-grade gas prized by owners of imports
like BMW's and Mercedes-Benzes suddenly disappeared from stations
more than a week ago.

Over the summer, American soldiers were posted at gas stations to
discourage a black market in gasoline. But now jobless men stand by
the lines of cars and offer to sell gas from plastic jerrycans at
huge markups - sometimes five times the stations' rate. As Mr. Ali
inched up to a big government-run gas station called Al Hurea, which
means "freedom," a boy raced up to a Range Rover with a jerrycan and
a funnel cut from a plastic water bottle.

As with so many things here, frustration over waits often turns to
venomous feelings aimed at Iraq's foreign administration. In early
August, riots broke out in the southern city of Basra over shortages
of gasoline and electricity.

Asim Jihad, a spokesman for the Oil Ministry, said repeated bombings
of the northern pipelines were the main cause of the current
shortages. On Nov. 17, insurgents blew up a section of the pipeline
between a refinery in the town of Bayji and the main refinery in
Baghdad.

Mr. Jihad added that the surge in car imports since tariffs were
lifted after the American-led invasion - 250,000 have flooded the
country - has also raised demand for gas.

The gas pumps need electricity, and large sections of Baghdad lost
electricity for almost three days two weeks ago, contributing to the
problem. Multihour blackouts have remained frequent ever since. The
power failures have also led many people to use gasoline-powered
generators, so they siphon gas from their cars, worsening the
shortage.

Zubeid al-Zubeidy, the manager of Al Hurea, said the government
usually sent four full tankers a day to his station, but that number
fell to two or three on several days in the past week. "I'm nervous
because of the people," he said, a handgun on his desk. "If I get 100
percent deliveries, then it's easy to provide gas. If not, then the
people will come and take their anger out on me."

Dan Senor, a spokesman for the Coalition Provisional Authority, the
American-led administration, said the run on gas was seasonal and
perhaps worsened by consumers who buy fuel when they do not need it.
"We've heard from some Iraqis that when they suspect there is going
to be a shortage, there is a sort of hoarding that goes on," he said.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/03/international/middleeast/03LINE.html>
--
Yoshie

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