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These stories are so commonplace, I barely notice them anymore: Since 2008, Akron-based White Hat Management, has collected around $230 million to run charter schools in Ohio. The company has grown into a national chain and reports that it has about 20,000 students across the country. But now 10 of its own schools and the state of Ohio are suing, complaining that many White Hat students are failing, and that the company has refused to account for how it has spent the money. The dispute between White Hat and Ohio, which is unfolding in court in Franklin County, provides a glimpse of a larger trend: the growing role of private management companies in publicly funded charter schools. Contrary to the idea of charters as small, locally run schools, around a third of the schools now pay management companies — which can be either for-profit or nonprofit — to perform many of the most fundamental school services, like hiring and firing staff, developing curricula and disciplining students. But while the shortcomings of traditional public schools have received much attention in recent years, a look at the private sector’s efforts to run schools in Ohio, Florida and New York shows that turning things over to a company has created its own set of problems. Maybe it’s because I see so many stories like this in my local paper : A federal grand jury has indicted two former top officials at a charter school in Northwest Philadelphia on charges of stealing $522,000 in taxpayer funds. The 27-count indictment charges Hugh C. Clark, 64, and Ina M. Walker, 58, with conspiracy, wire fraud, and theft from a federally funded program, U.S. Attorney Zane David Memeger announced Thursday. The pair, both from Philadelphia, allegedly used the money slated for New Media charter school to pay expenses at Lotus Academy, a small private school they controlled; to fund personal businesses, including the Black Olive health-food store and the Black Olive restaurant in Mount Airy; and for personal expenses, including meals and credit-card bills, Memeger said. The indictments, which were unsealed Thursday, came nearly two years after The Inquirer first reported allegations of fiscal mismanagement and conflicts of interest at the school, which has campuses in the Stenton and Germantown neighborhoods. And that was just this week. We have problems going back to the beginning of the charter school movement in Philadelphia, and I’d guess this is going on all over the country: the management contracts are handed out as patronage plums to incompetent, unethical, or outright fraudulent management. Why, we even have one school that was doubling as a nightclub , and selling booze on the weekends. (I wish I was kidding.) But we’re “saving the inner city schools,” and it makes rich CEOs feel like they’re helping, so it’s all good!

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Manchester City v Manchester United

• Hit F5 for updates or select our auto-refresh button below • Check the rest of today’s action on our live scoreboard • Email your thoughts to scott.murray@guardian.co.uk 8 min: Balotelli, in the centre circle, heads the ball wide right to Toure, who cuts inside and powers down the inside-right channel, before rolling a well-weighted pass down the middle for Balotelli (who had kept going) to run onto. Van der Sar is wise to their game, though, and out of his box early to clear. Lovely play all round, that. 6 min: Now Kolarov is very late on Valencia. If this was the 76th minute, that’d have been a booking. As it is, Mike Dean keeps his card in his pocket. 5 min: “They say form goes out the window in a local derby,” begins wise old Gary Naylor, “but I’ve a sneaking feeling that Paul Scholes will pick up a yellow card.” And sure enough, he’s late on De Jong. The referee chooses to wave play on. 3 min: Now City take a while to knock it around. Everyone’s just settling their nerves at the moment. Speaking of which, the ITV feed went down for a few seconds there. Somewhere, the hapless goon who pulled the plug on Steven Gerrard’s goal at the World Cup, and the dyspraxic lead-unplugging eejit who wiped out Dan Gosling’s FA Cup winner for Everton against Liverpool, were breathing a sigh of relief, no longer the company pariahs. Much like how Graeme Souness felt when Roy Hodgson took over at Liverpool, I guess. But the feed comes back up quite quickly, and we move on. You’ve missed nothing. And we’re off! United set the ball rolling, kicking towards the… er… the Hangar Lane Roundabout End? Anyway, they’re kicking that way. The Treble-winning wannabes hog the ball at the back for a while, stroking it around so as many of their men get a feel of it early on. The City fans boo and holler. What an atmosphere! “The referee’s a scouser!” splutters Jonny Mac, one bolus of phlegm flying just past Wirral whistleman Mike Dean’s lugs. “Well, close enough. Should be a grand afternoon for the neutral.” Let’s hope so. whatever happens. There is one hell of an atmosphere at Wembley. As you’d expect. The teams walk out at David Sole pace to a mighty roar. City have some natty 1981-style tracksuit tops on. I wonder what the thinking is there. “The train service is probably less reliable than it was in the 1800s,” notes Lizz Poulter, in a futile attempt at getting ITV News out of my bad books. ITV News has just run a lengthy pre-match report showing fans of both clubs getting off the train from Manchester at London Euston. They’ve sent cameras down to catch this historic event for posterity. FOR GOD’S SAKE. Given this is 2011, and the west-coast railway line has been running since the mid 1800s, what exactly do they expect people to do upon disembarking? Run out of the concourse in wide-eyed wonder like Frank Sinatra and Gene Kelly in On the Town ? All together now: “The London Borough of Brent, it’s a helluva town…” Referee: Mike Dean (Wirral) Manchester United (4-3-2-1): Van der Sar, O’Shea, Ferdinand, Vidic, Evra, Valencia, Scholes, Carrick, Park, Nani, Berbatov. Subs: Kuszczak, Owen, Anderson, Smalling, Hernandez, Fabio Da Silva, Gibson. Manchester City (7-2-1): Hart, Zabaleta, Kompany, Lescott, Kolarov, Silva, De Jong, Barry, Toure Yaya, Adam Johnson, and the one-man nuclear meltdown that is Mario Balotelli. Subs: Taylor, Boyata, Vieira, Milner, Wright-Phillips, Dzeko, Jo. Kick off: 5.15pm. One good omen for City (sort of): They won the last (and indeed the first) FA Cup semi between these two teams. The 1926 semi at Bramall Lane ended 3-0 to City. Of course, it goes without saying that they went on to lose the final and get themselves relegated. You wouldn’t get away with this if you were writing a script. So this is a big one, City desperate for the opportunity to end their trophy drought against either Bolton Wanderers or Stoke City on May 14, their bitter city rivals hoping to set up part two of The Treble. The recent form is with United. City did the league double over United in 2007/08, but United responded with one of their own in 2008/09, and another last season when both victories were secured with injury-time winners, one from Michael Owen, the next from Paul Scholes. United have also had the better of it this season, Wayne Rooney memorably goofing around like Mark Hughes to win the recent game at Old Trafford. In fact, City’s only win in the last three campaigns has come in last year’s Carling Cup semi first leg, but United managed to even overturn that in the second match with, yes, another last-minute winner. Are City due a break? Or does this just mean United are going to pile on more agony for their neighbours? After a fallow period for this derby in the late 1990s and early 2000s, plenty of Mancunian morbo has been built up in recent years; let’s hope for another few layers of drama and nonsense today. United, by comparison… Well, there’s no need to be riffing on City’s pain any more than is totally necessary, is there. United fans will argue that not winning the FA Cup for seven years constitutes far too long a drought for a club of their size, but come on, let’s all be reasonable here. 42 years, though. 42 years! Every fan of Manchester City, as well as the entire support of Manchester United, can rattle off the numbers. It’s been 30 years since City last contested an FA Cup semi-final. It’s been 30 years since they got to the final. It’s been 35 years since they won a major trophy. And it’s been 42 years since they lifted the FA Cup. FA Cup Manchester City Manchester United Scott Murray guardian.co.uk

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Krauthammer: Media Love Reporting Nonexistent Civil War Between Republicans and Tea Party

As we've seen so far this year, the media on every vote that takes place in Congress love reporting about a supposed civil war between regular Republicans and members of the Tea Party. Charles Krauthammer on PBS's “Inside Washington” Friday night noted the press continue harping on this despite it not being the case (video follows with transcript and commentary): COLBY KING, WASHINGTON POST: Boehner could not have gotten it done without the Democrats, who held back to see how much he could produce, and that’s sort of a harbinger of things to come. Boehner does not have full control of his conference… CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER: But the Democrats don't, either. Their split was even larger. KING: He’s the Leader. KRAUTHAMMER: Pelosi voted against it. KING: It’s his House. NINA TOTENBERG, NPR: Theirs was larger, but it was controlled, as it were. TOTENBERG: The interesting thing, I actually think we will have a government shutdown, probably not over the debt limit, but maybe in the fall. There is a certain amount of brinksmanship going on here, and especially I think by people who have not been through this. I think John Boehner completely understands that this would not be good for his Party, that the president tends to win these battles, and, but he may not be able to control his folks, and I, you know, I really thought last week we came perilously close to having a shutdown. GORDON PETERSON, HOST: You were surprised there wasn’t a shutdown. TOTENBERG: I was surprised. KRAUTHAMMER: The media love the story line of the civil war among Republicans, between Tea Party and regulars, and they keep reporting it again and again – a civil war. It doesn't happen. But it won't stop them from reporting it as a future occurrence, until it happens. First to Totenberg's point about the split in the Democrat party being “controlled,” as Politico reported Thursday: House Democratic leadership split yet again, this time on a vote to fund the government through September. Hours Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi voted “no,” a few hours after she told reporters she felt “no ownership” over the deal. The No. 2 Democrat in the House, Steny Hoyer, voted for the spending bill. The Sacramento Bee went further on Friday: House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi's power waned just a little bit more this week, the latest comedown for a 71-year-old politician who lost her gavel. Some fellow Democrats are deserting her. She was absent from recent high-stakes negotiations that averted a government shutdown. Her chief deputy, Minority Whip Steny Hoyer of Maryland, seems primed for more prominent deal-making. Even as the House on Thursday approved a major budget-cutting bill, Pelosi took herself out of the action. “I feel no ownership of that, or responsibility to it,” Pelosi said of the budget-cutting bill. “There are divisions in the (Democratic) caucus,” said Rep. Jim Costa, D-Fresno, “and I don't know that she's put a great deal of effort into dealing with those divisions.” Sound “controlled” to you? As for Krauthammer's point about the media's fascination with a nonexistent civil war, he was spot on. If one Republican doesn't vote with the majority, GOP-hating press are going to blame it on the Tea Party and Boehner's supposed lack of strength as Leader, and they're going to doing it regardless of whether or not it actually happens. Meanwhile, divisions within the Democrat Party will be dishonestly depicted as “controlled.” Got that?

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Gaddafi forces step up Misrata bombardment

Heavy attacks rouse fears that the army has fired cluster bombs into rebel stronghold Forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi have continued their heavy bombardment of residential areas of Misrata amid mounting concern that the army has fired cluster bombs into the besieged rebel stronghold. At least 100 Soviet-designed Grad rocket rockets were fired into the eastern city today, a rebel spokesman said. “They fired Grads at an industrial area this morning, at least one hundred rockets were fired. No casualties are reported,” Abdelbasset Abu Mzereiq told Reuters. The Grad, which launches multiple rockets from mobile launchers, has been blamed for a number of civilian deaths in recent days. More than 100 of the rockets landed in the city yesterday as pro-Gaddafi forces reached the city centre, the rebels said. “Witnesses said they saw pro-Gaddafi soldiers on foot in the city centre today. Except for snipers, they usually stay in their tanks and armoured vehicles,” the rebel spokesman added. The intensifying bombardment came as Human Rights Watch reported that four cluster bombs exploded in the city yesterday and on Thursday, and two Libyan residents of Misrata told the Guardian that they suspected the munitions, banned in most countries, were being used. Cluster bombs explode in midair, indiscriminately throwing out dozens of high-explosive bomblets which cause damage and injuries over a large area. The submunitions often fail to explode on impact but detonate when stepped on or picked up. Pro-Gaddafi authorities said a Red Cross team had arrived in Misrata to assess the situation at the invitation of the government. “The Libyan army took them to a specific place into the city and the Red Cross went to the other side [the one controlled by the opposition],” said government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim. The team would issue a report on its preliminary findings, he added. The team was invited before the use of cluster bombs was reported. The worsening seige of the rebel stronghold follows a commitment by the leaders of US, Britain and France to pursue military action until Colonel Gaddafi has been removed from power. In a joint letter yesterday, Barack Obama, David Cameron and Nicolas Sarkozy described the onslaught on Misrata as a “medieval siege … to strangle its population into submission”. The former head of the UK’s armed forces, Lord Dannatt, urged the international coalition to seek a fresh UN security council resolution specifically authorising the training and arming of the rebels, warning that a stalemate would create a vacuum likely to be filled by Islamist extremists. “We want to act within the law, within international agreement and therefore we should be arguing the case to not accept a stalemate, not to put our own boots on the ground, but to properly arm those boots that are on the ground. “They are Libyan boots. Let the Libyan people have the wherewithal to choose a new government for themselves,” he told BBC Radio 4′s Today programme. “We have got to move this one on, we have got to be innovative about the way we do it. I have thought about it long and hard: go back to New York, get a strengthened UN security council resolution and arm, equip and train the opposition.” The use of cluster bombs had further weakened Gaddafi’s position, Dannatt added. “If we thought that Gaddafi had lost the moral right to rule this country a month ago, he has lost it in the last 24 hours, that’s for sure.” Libya Arab and Middle East unrest Middle East David Batty guardian.co.uk

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Now in their eighth year, the Observer Food Monthly Awards celebrate the very best in British food and produce

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Standoff at Tibetan monastery

Spiritual leader says China should be asked to show restraint in five-day standoff between monks and armed police A five-day stand-off between monks and armed police at a Tibetan monastery in western China could become “explosive”, the Dalai Lama has warned. The Tibetan spiritual leader also asked the international community to request that Chinese authorities show restraint in the confrontation at Kirti monastery in Sichuan, where police have reportedly locked down the complex with up to 2,500 monks inside. The International Campaign for Tibet said hundreds of Tibetans gathered at the monastery in Aba county, also known as Ngaba, believing the authorities were preparing to forcibly remove the monks for “patriotic education”. Exiles allege that security forces beat residents and loosed dogs on them as they forced their way through the crowds on Tuesday, injuring two women in their sixties. The re-education campaign was launched after a young monk from Kirti reportedly died after setting fire to himself in protest against Chinese rule on 16 March. English language state media have mentioned the death but have not referred to the clash at the monastery, and the Guardian has not been able to confirm it independently. A spokeswoman at the Aba local government office said she knew nothing about the situation. But the United States has raised concerns about the confrontation with Beijing. “I am very concerned that this situation if allowed to go on may become explosive with catastrophic consequences for the Tibetans in Ngaba,” the Dalai Lama said late yesterday. “I urge both the monks and the lay Tibetans of the area not to do anything that might be used as a pretext by the local authorities to massively crackdown on them. “I also strongly urge the international community, the governments around the world, and the international non-governmental organisations to persuade the Chinese leadership to exercise restraint in handling this situation.” The Tibetan spiritual leader lives in exile in Dharamsala, India. Beijing accuses him of seeking to split Tibet from the rest of China, while he says he seeks only meaningful autonomy. The dead monk, identified by the Chinese state news agency Xinhua as Rigzin Phuntsog, 16, set fire to himself on the anniversary of a clash at Aba in 2008 when troops opened fire against demonstrators protesting against Chinese treatment of Tibetans, reportedly killing 10. Aba is one of many areas outside the Tibet region with a large Tibetan population. Tibetan exiles allege that the police beat Phuntsog instead of putting out the flames. Other monks then intervened, dragging him into the monastery for shelter before taking him to a hospital. A Chinese state media report denied that he had been beaten, saying a post-mortem found no injuries other than burns, and alleged he died because the monks denied him medical treatment. The International Campaign for Tibet says that authorities then installed a barbed wire fence and concrete wall around much of the huge complex and detained several Tibetans, including a 16-year-old boy and Phuntsog’s brother and uncle. The campaign said residents were allowed to deliver food to the monastery for the first time yesterday and that 15 senior monks spoke to the director of the religious affairs bureau after local religious leaders asked for dialogue. Sophie Richardson, Asia advocacy director at Human Rights Watch , said: “The use of violence against peaceful, unarmed demonstrators including those surrounding the Kirti monastery would be both unjustifiable and completely unlawful. “It is vital that Chinese security forces respect the safety of all concerned, use the minimum force needed to keep public order, and fully respect both the monks and bystanders’ right to freely practice religion, assemble, and peacefully carry out protests.” A foreign ministry spokesman did not answer questions about the incident at a regular press briefing on Thursday, but said Beijing’s policies had dramatically raised Tibetans’ living standards. China Tibet Dalai Lama Buddhism Religion Tania Branigan guardian.co.uk

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Afghan bomb kills nine troops

Taliban claims ‘sleeper agent’ inside Afghan army carried out attack at base near Jalalabad A suicide bombing at a military base in eastern Afghanistan has killed five foreign and four Afghan soldiers. A bomber wearing a military uniform struck inside the base near the city of Jalalabad, the Afghan defence ministry said. The blast took place shortly after 7.30am Afghan time and represents the biggest recent killing of Nato troops from a single attack. Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in an email that the bomber was from central Daikondi province, had enlisted with the Afghan army a month ago and detonated his explosives at a meeting between Afghan and foreign troops. Reuters reported the Afghan defence ministry was investigating whether the attacker was a disguised Taliban fighter or an Afghan soldier. Coalition officials in Afghanistan confirmed five foreign troops died but did not give their nationalities. The bombing is the third attack in a few days blamed on the Taliban. The first killed a tribal elder closely linked to President Hamid Karzai, while on Friday the police chief of the southern province of Kandahar was killed. More than 120 foreign soldiers have died this year in Afghanistan. Afghanistan Nato guardian.co.uk

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M1 closure brings holiday chaos

Motorway shutdown in wake of scrapyard fire will cause major delays to thousands of football fans and runners Thousands of people travelling to London for two FA Cup semi-finals and the London Marathon face major delays due to the partial closure of the M1. The motorway has been shut both ways between junctions one and four, between Brent Cross and Elstree, Hertfordshire, since Friday after a scrapyard fire. The Highways Agency said the M1 will remain fully closed for several more hours today. The agency added that it hoped to have at least one lane open on the M1, northbound only, by the time the FA Cup semi-final between Manchester City and Manchester United finishes at Wembley. Motorists are advised to avoid the M1 and continue to use alternative routes. Scores of firefighters were called to the blaze at Mill Hill, near to Scratchwood Services, at about 4am on Friday. London Fire Brigade said about 50 people living in properties near the scrapyard were evacuated as a precaution while gas cylinders were cooled and made safe. Engineers are checking whether there has been any damage to the seven-mile stretch of the motorway affected by the blaze. Aston Villa supporters are also due to travel to London, to watch their team’s Premier League match at West Ham United later, while Chelsea fans will be travelling from the capital to their team’s game at West Bromwich Albion. Tomorrow thousands of football fans are expected at Wembley for another FA Cup semi-final between Bolton Wanderers and Stoke City. Runners in tomorrow’s London Marathon also have to collect their accreditations at Excel in east London by 5pm today. Road transport FA Cup London Marathon Manchester City Manchester United Athletics David Batty guardian.co.uk

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Councils slash free adult social care

Discrimination warning as coalition cuts prompt local authorities to set bar higher for eldery and disabled to receive care Thousands of older people and those with disabilities have had their care cut in the past year as cash-strapped councils reduce the level of support they provide, a survey has found. The number of councils in England cutting back on free adult social care has increased by 13% this year, according to the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (Adass). It found that 19 local authorities had raised the eligibility bar for free adult social care. Six councils, including the largest, Birmingham, are limiting free care to people in “critical” need, which includes those with life-threatening conditions. Another 116 of 148 councils surveyed only fund people with substantial needs. Only 22 local authorities now fund people with moderate needs, such as those too frail or ill to eat a meal or take a bath without assistance. Previously, 36 councils gave this assistance. Richard Jones, chairman of Adass, told BBC Radio 4′s Today programme: “This is a group who five years ago half of councils were providing support to, now we’re down to fewer than 20%. And we fear with more cuts to come in future years it could get even worse.” The move follow a sharp reduction in central funding for local authorities by the coalition government. Andrew Harrop, of the charity Age UK, warned that people could die as a result of the cuts, some of which could prove to be illegal. “They may be failing in their duties under disability discrimination laws or under the Human Rights Act because all public authorities are responsible for looking after the very most disabled and vulnerable,” he told the BBC. “If a level of support fails at the very minimum test it could be deemed illegal.” The government has allocated an extra £2bn a year by 2014-15 for social care services but this was not ringfenced and follows deep cuts in local authority funding. A Department of Health spokesman said: “This funding, together with an ambitious programme of efficiency, should enable local authorities to protect people’s access to services and deliver new approaches to improve their care.” An independent commission on social care set up by the government is due to report in July and will put forward plans in a white paper before the end of the year. Andrew Dilnot, head of the Commission on the Funding of Care and Support, said adult social care had “always been a cinderella service” that has never worked. “The system that we have at the moment is not one we can be proud of and it is under enormous pressure,” he told the BBC. “It’s widely seen as unfair. Even before the reductions in local authority funding that are going on at the moment this was a system that needed reform. “There’s no doubt that there’s a growing amount of unmet need.” Dilnot suggested that he backed a national system of assessing care, which would allow for local variation in the way it is delivered. Social care Local politics Local government Liberal-Conservative coalition David Batty guardian.co.uk

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On Business: latest in our oil stories

A desert trip to a meeting in Damascus reveals a significant find in this new story by Robin Yassin-Kassab He filled up the tank before he left Kuwait City, filled it again at Qurriyat near the Saudi-Jordanian border. He stopped a couple of times for sandwiches and crisps, otherwise kept on driving through the flat desert with stereo playing and air conditioning humming. They waved him through the crossings after he’d waved his genuine Rolex and his heavy silver rings at them. Including border stops, the journey took eighteen hours. These days the world’s a small place, which is one of the Prophet’s Signs of the Hour – distances will disappear before the end comes. Dusk was falling on Damascus when he arrived. Fumes rose from the minibuses and paraffin heaters and from people’s cigarettes and swirled up to meet the thickening night. Green lights and minarets shook on either side, and there were potholes in the asphalt. He didn’t bother checking into his hotel. He wanted to get straight to business. He drove towards the mountain, through the centre of town. He followed a highway along the bed of a gorge. Here at last the barren melted against the power of potential fertility. A gurgling stream rushed beside the road, and there were trees and restaurants, sometimes dining rooms fatly bridging the water. He pulled in at a building more contemporary than the rest, a tall building fronted in metal and dark mirrors. A smartly dressed youth sat behind the reception desk. Stairs to the upstairs rooms rose to the right. Two miniature trees sat potted on either side of the bottom step. He looked at the youth, and straightaway asked, “Is Miss Dallal here?” “Miss Dallal?” “That’s right.” “Do you have an appointment?” He chose not to pull rank. “No I don’t.” “Just a moment, please. I’ll see if she’s not busy.” While he waited he finger-combed his hair in the glass of the door. He’d left his briefcase on the back seat of the car, beside his overnight bag. One kind of business at a time. She arrived in a black evening dress, holding a matching handbag out in front of her as if it might explode. Her gaze was intelligent, penetrative. Her body was well-curved but still sober and elegant. “You wanted me?” “Miss Dallal?” “Yes.” He told her his name. “People speak very highly of you,” he said. “They say you’re the best in the business.” She received his hand delicately. It shook, not quite imperceptibly, within her grasp. He wasn’t so sure of himself, even with all these years of experience fitted under his straining belt, even with the insulation of his impressive company title. “Come on,” she said. “Let’s have a drink first. Then we can talk.” She swished in front of him, leftwards through the swing door to the bar. A waiter pounced as they entered and ushered them through great wafts of noise to a table. He sat down and took his bearings. In the centre of the circular room women and girls were shuffling and kicking, fingers linked, on a dais. They revolved and paused and continued revolving in a reluctant sort of debke. But more were girls than women, most in their mid-teens, their hormonal and depression-related skin problems overbrushed with pink plaster. Smiles on their faces, their eyes in mid-focus. Knee-length dresses and well-dressed cleavage, or buds of breast on some of them, dark spots erect like goosebumps, like nausea and fear. One held the microphone and purred a tuneless lovesong to Iraq, her lost paradise. Surging synthesiser and an invisible drum backed her up. Each girl had a thick coil of black hair shimmering against the length of her back or brought over the crown of her head to be bumped and twitched like a curtain. The place was packed with men who’d driven north from the Gulf states. He was embarrassed when he realised this. Some fanned wads of lira or riyal at the girls’ feet or sprayed the notes into strobing smoke. One man danced in front of the dais, shaking his robed hips, shaking his hands above his head, kuffiyeh stretched between them. He was glad he was wearing his suit. He removed a tissue from the box on the table and wiped his brow with it. His substance becomes liquid at such ambient temperatures. He ordered whiskey while she sorted through her bag. Lipids rattling in there, lubricants, balms. He looked her carefully in the eye. “I’m an oil man,” he said, irrelevantly. “Me too,” she said, smiling. “I have a degree in petrochemicals. Everybody in our family.” Her eyes were green and flecked with gray. His eyes began to water. Blue gusts of smoke blew between them. Carbon and hydrogen were thick in this atmosphere. The bottle arrived with two glasses. “I’ve been to Iraq,” he said. “Lucky you.” “I was lucky. I enjoyed it. It was before you invaded us.” “I didn’t invade anybody.” “Forgive me, Miss Dallal,” he chuckled. “You know what I mean.” “So where did you go?” “I worked at the Rumaila field.” “My father worked on the Rumaila field.” He unlidded his eyes. “Really? What was his name?” “Ahmad Shujaat.” “No! Abu Jasim? What a coincidence! I worked with him. He was a respected man. I know him well. Tell me how he is.” “He’s dead, God have mercy.” She said it in a very flat and even tone, with the usual smile on her lips. “My God. What happened?” “Somebody shot him.” His next question died in his throat. He took a swallow of whiskey. “God have mercy. But your mother is alive?” “She is, thank God.” “Thank God. And in good health I trust. You must send my best wishes.” “Send them yourself. That’s her over there…” He followed her slender finger across the jumping heads of the crowd to a woman who sat in the shadows. A late middle-aged woman in a white hijab, stiff-lipped, dessicated by tension, rigidly respectable. The only woman in the room wearing hijab. Scornful of the humid heat, she also wore a long blue overcoat. He looked at her briefly, hard, and then, for a long time, he stared at the table. “Don’t you want to say hello?” “I never met her,” he said. “The time isn’t suitable.” He sipped the whiskey. “Jasim, your brother. Is he alright?” “No. God have mercy.” He tapped the glass against his teeth. “He was in the wrong place at the wrong time,” she said, and then more wistfully, “do you think there’s a moral lesson in it?” His brow sank in confusion. “A moral lesson?” “It depends on the place, I suppose, and why he was there. As well as the time…” She talked and she kept talking. She talked as if she were compelled to let it out, all that material accumulated inside her and crushed into fuel for her speaking. The corpses were trapped in her soul as in a sealed tomb. No worms in there to eat the memory and only the hardiest of bacteria, so putrefaction had been a slow business. The gases released during the process were caught, concentrated, and the remaining black essence had been distilled to an ever blacker, ever more tarry substance. This roiled and sludged between her spine and her sternum, under immense pressure. Now that a breach had been opened, it spurted upwards through her throat. He let her go on, nodding, not properly listening, blinking smoke from his lashes. It was difficult to hear because of the music. He poured and sipped, drank until his chest was burning. Soon he would steer her back to business. But he didn’t need to. She abruptly broke off and leant in close, laying her hand on his thigh. Surprised, he tensed the muscle there, shifting his bulk a little so the splayed-out flesh wouldn’t seem so flabby. “It’s time to start the negotiation,” she said. He swallowed. “I want everything,” he blurted next. He frowned at the table as he said it. “You can have everything you want for twenty thousand.” “I haven’t changed my dinars yet.” “The equivalent then.” “That’s fine,” he mumbled. She stood up. “Come on. Let’s go upstairs.” They left the salon arm-in-arm. Miss Dallal’s mother followed at a distance. • Supported by the National Lottery through Arts Council England Original writing Fiction Oil Oil spills BP oil spill Energy guardian.co.uk

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