Sun.Star Cebu

Iraq ‘expels’ Saudi envoy after assassinat­ion remarks

● According to Saudi ambassador in Baghdad Thamer al-Sabhan, ● Iranian-backed Shiite militias are plotting to assassinat­e him ● Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmed Jamal says al-Sabhan’s allegation­s are considered interferen­ce in Iraq’s internal affairs

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BAGHDAD—Iraq’s Foreign Ministry said the government on Sunday formally requested that the Saudi ambassador in Baghdad be replaced after he claimed that Iranian-backed Shiite militias are plotting to assassinat­e him.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Ahmed Jamal told The Associated Press that the government sent a formal request to Saudi Arabia to replace the kingdom’s ambassador in Baghdad, Thamer al-Sabhan.

Jamal said al-Sabhan’s reported comments are untrue and harm relations between the two countries.

He said the allegation­s are considered interferen­ce in Iraq’s internal affairs and that al-Sabhan has not provided the ministry with any proof or evidence of these claims.

Shiite-led Iran and Sunni-led Saudi Arabia are regional rivals and broke off diplomatic ties in January after several years of frayed relations.

In 2011, US authoritie­s said they had disrupted an Iranian plot to assassinat­e the Saudi ambassador to Washington at the time.

Al-Sabhan was quoted as telling the Saudiowned al-Hayat newspaper that Iraqi intelligen­ce provided him with informatio­n about the assassinat­ion plans.

He said this was happening as Iran tries to block reform efforts in Iraq and other Arab countries.

Al-Sabhan was also quoted by the Saudi-owned al-Arabiya news channel saying “sectarian radical groups” are behind the threats.

The channel, quoting unnamed sources, alleged that Iranian-backed senior figures in Iraq’s Popular Mobilizati­on Committee are among those behind the assassinat­ion plots and that they had given the Iraqi Foreign Ministry a deadline to expel al-Sabhan.

In the Saudi-owned Ashraq al-Awsat newspaper, an unnamed Iraqi official was quoted as saying militias were planning to attack the ambassador’s armored cars with rocket-propelled grenades.

In an interview aired on Iraqi channel Wesal TV, Aws al-Khafaji, who heads the Iraqi militia group Abu al-Fadhl al-Abbas, said many factions in Iraq want to target al-Sabhan. (AP)

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