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Fumbling in the dark for her kerosene lamp, the room silent without the hum
of the fridge or the television, Hamdia Naief was not sure whether this era
should be called pre-industrial or post-Saddam.
A school caretaker, she lives with her husband in a middle-class district
of east Baghdad with leafy avenues, satellite dishes and air-conditioning systems.
But four hours out of six are without electricity. Their flat has few windows,
to minimise the summer heat, and with no power there is no light, so the couple
spend most of the day in gloom. "We can't really afford the kerosene so
we try not to use the lamp much," Mrs Naief said. A power surge burnt the
motor in their fridge and the oven does not work, so they cook non-perishable
food on a stove on the floor. It has been this way since the invasion in March
2003. The caretaker's husband, Abdul Timimi, cursed the world in general and
the Americans and Iraqi authorities in particular. "It's worse all the
time."
All across the capital, in tones ranging from incandescent to resigned, there
are similar stories of lives blighted by the blackouts. It is a jarring note
to the optimism of last month's elections and bullish claims that the insurgency
is faltering. Recent attacks on the gas and oil pipes to the power plants, officials
say, show an increasingly sophisticated strategy of putting Baghdad under economic
siege. Its six million inhabitants are accustomed to a near first-world infrastructure
from Saddam Hussein's time and its degradation has fed antipathy to the occupation.
After security, electricity is the priority and fixing it is a credibility test
for the USbacked government.
"They think when they throw their light switches they know whether or
not we are doing our job well," said Rick Whitaker, who administers infrastructure
projects for the US Agency for International Development. Last month the national
grid delivered half the 8,300 megawatts the country needed, so power was rationed,
three hours on, three hours off, he said.
By summer, when 50C (122F) temperatures cook the city and everybody seeks air
conditioning, the supply should rise to 6,500-7,000MW, close to the level under
the Ba'athist regime, when managers and engineers could work with order and
security.
The expected improvement reflected the efforts of the US and Iraqi authorities
to rehabilitate old power plants and build new ones, said Mr Whitaker. The new
system distributed power equitably across the country, unlike Saddam's, which
starved the provinces to spoil the capital.
USAid alone was spending $2.4bn (£1.25bn) on infrastructure, but overall
responsibility lay with the Iraqi government. Considering the dilapidation inherited
two years ago - "power plants were held together by bailing wire and bubble
gum" - Mr Whitaker said this was an unsung success.
Outside the heavily fortified green zone and its giant generators, the picture
looks different. Residents say they are lucky to get four hours on, two hours
off, and see no sign of improvement. Ahmed Sahib, 43, an electrician in the
Karrada district, said he was besieged by clients, some tearful, begging him
to work miracles. "Under Saddam we had 20 hours a day. That is what we
are used to."
Booming demand for Chinese-made domestic generators, priced $145 to $450, has
profited street traders like Ahmad Ghazi, just 17 and recently engaged thanks
to his prospects as a long-term money-earner. Customers inspecting his wares
expressed sympathy for those who could not afford generators. They said things
were getting worse - disrupted supplies have made generator fuel scarce - and
heaped blame on the Americans and Iraqi authorities. Some said it was a conspiracy
to punish Iraqis.
It was precisely what the insurgents hoped to hear. To destabilise the new
government and discredit the occupation, the disparate mix of Islamic radicals
and former Ba'athists have focused their attacks on infrastructure on the pipelines
to Baghdad's refineries and cut production of oil, kerosene and petrol.
The saboteurs had largely succeeded in isolating the city from power sources,
the electricity minister, Aiham Alsammarae, told the New York Times this week.
"They know what they are doing. Their intelligence is much better than
the government's," he said.
A trip with engineers to a power plant under construction on the outskirts
of Baghdad showed extreme security measures: three bodyguards for each engineer,
armour-plated vehicles, and a helicopter for aerial cover. Six people died in
an ambushed convoy in September.
The plant, which cannot be identified, was a virtual fortress: sandbags, concrete
warrens, signs for mortar bunkers and Nepalese and Afrikaner guards. Security
costs up to a quarter of the $160m budget, an official said. At least four Iraq
contractors have been assassinated and many threatened. Managers praised the
600- strong workforce as brave, diligent and skilled. Lengthy security checks
each morning shave three hours off what should be a 10-hour working day. Work
on generators was several months behind schedule but by summer they should be
producing 216MW, an engineer said. "We are making good progress but it's
still not fast enough to get people the electricity they need."