Iraq slaps VP with travel ban

yesterday, sharpening a sectarian-tinged political crisis just after the last US troops departed.
The completion of the US withdrawal on Sunday ended nearly nine years of war, but left many Iraqis fearful that a shaky peace between majority Shi’ites and Sunnis might collapse and reignite sectarian violence.

“We received the travel ban order for Hashemi,” said a senior security official, adding that the ban had been issued by five judges investigating allegations against the Sunni leader.
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a Shi’ite, has also asked parliament for a no-confidence vote against another leading Sunni politician, Saleh al-Mutlaq, who is deputy prime minister, on the grounds that he lacked faith in the political process.

Hashemi and Mutlaq are both leaders of the Iraqiya bloc, a secular group backed by minority Sunnis, which joined Maliki’s unity government only reluctantly and recently boycotted parliament sessions after complaining of being marginalised, even though it is the single biggest bloc in the assembly.
Security sources and lawmakers said on Sunday an arrest warrant had been issued for Hashemi, one of Iraq’s two vice-presidents, but that Sunni and Shi’ite politicians had intervened to stop the arrest from being carried out.

Security sources, who asked not to be named, said the arrest warrant was issued after four of Hashemi’s bodyguards, who were arrested two weeks ago, accused him of links with terrorism.
In a statement yesterday, Hashemi accused Maliki’s government of “deliberate harassment” after his plane was delayed for three hours at Baghdad airport. He had been heading for the Kurdish city of Sulaimaniya to meet the Iraqi president.

Security forces arrested three of Ha-shemi’s bodyguards on their way back from the airport, the statement said.
Military forces surrounding Hashe-mi’s house for weeks had been beefed up. The renewed political infighting has overshadowed the US withdrawal and dominated Iraqi newspaper headlines yesterday. – Reuters.

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