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ReutersBAGHDAD, Feb 18 (Reuters) - Gunmen killed a member of Iraq's largest Sunni Arab party on Wednesday, police said, the latest in a number of political assassinations following recent local polls that brought a major shift to Iraqi politics.
Samir Safwat, a lawyer who was an official at a local office of the Iraqi Islamic Party (IIP), was shot in his car in Baghdad's Zaafariniya neighbourhood.
Police said Safwat's wife was a candidate in the Jan. 31 provincial election for the IIP, the country's largest Sunni Arab political force since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.
The IIP called the killing "an attempt to incite sectarian violence anew and silence the (party's) national project." It said three party members had been killed in less than a month.
"The party wonders about the mysterious increase in criminal acts," the IIP said, asking the government to halt such crimes. The IIP, banned under Saddam Hussein's largely secular rule, was one of the major religious parties which appears to have been punished in the provincial vote by Iraqis fed up with what they see as an ineffective political class.
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