Home NEWS WORLD NEWS Aide to top Shiite cleric says Iraq cannot bear sectarian crisis; Sunni official detained

Aide to top Shiite cleric says Iraq cannot bear sectarian crisis; Sunni official detained

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Aide to top Shiite cleric says Iraq cannot bear sectarian crisis; Sunni official detained

By Associated Press
The Washington Post, Baghdad, 21 Jan 2012 –
Iraqi authorities detained a senior Sunni official on terrorism charges Friday, even as an aide to the country’s most prominent Shiite cleric urged politicians on both sides of the sectarian divide to end an escalating political crisis .
The political battle erupted last month after the Shiite-led government issued an arrest warrant against the Sunni vice president , Tareq al-Hashemi , on terrorism charges , sending him into virtual exile to the Kurdish autonomous region in northern Iraq. In protest, al-Hashemi’s Sunni-backed Iraqiya bloc has been boycotting parliament and Cabinet sessions, bringing government work to a standstill.
The political troubles coincide with a wave of bombing attacks, most of them targeting Shiites, killing more than 160 people this year. The twin crises have raised fears of a reprise of a conflict five years ago, when heavily armed Shiite and Sunni militias battled each other and brought the nation to the brink of civil war.
The growing tensions prompted Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, who is revered by Iraqis Shiite majority, to urge both sides to find a solution to the crisis.
Al-Sistani’s aide, Ahmed al-Safi, said during a Friday sermon in the holy city of Karbala that after years of conflict, Iraq cannot bear further tensions among politicians.
Al-Sistani normally exerts his influence through sermons and statements made by his aides.
On Wednesday, Iraqiya’s leader Ayad Allawi accused al-Maliki of unfairly targeting Sunni officials and deliberately triggering a political crisis that is tearing Iraq apart. Allawi, who is a Shiite, said Iraq needs a new prime minister or new elections to the country from disintegrating along sectarian lines.