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BAGHDAD — The jet left Baghdad and had just crossed the ribbon of blue indicating the Euphrates River thousands of feet below when it arced back toward the Iraqi capital Wednesday.

When the plane landed at Baghdad’s airport, a security guard came aboard and then left with a high-profile passenger, parliament member Mohammed al-Dayni. But al-Dayni’s whereabouts remain a mystery as the political clamor over his alleged crimes, everything from murder to gold heists, escalates.

The plainclothes security guard who escorted al-Dayni, a Sunni Arab politician, off the plane was part of his personal security contingent, as were the security officers who drove away with him shortly before a nationwide manhunt began.

Late Wednesday, a spokesman for Iraq’s security force, Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, said police were scouring the country and watching the borders for al-Dayni, who faced arrest after fellow lawmakers voted earlier in the day to lift his parliamentary immunity. The order to turn his flight around came from the prime minister’s office, shortly before the vote.

But the lifting of immunity apparently did not come early enough for police to be ready when the Iraqi Airways jet returned to Baghdad from its aborted flight to Jordan. The lawmaker had time to evade what he says is a politically charged indictment being steered by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s Shiite-led government.

The strange case erupted Sunday when al-Moussawi announced that al-Dayni, a frequent critic of al-Maliki’s government and opponent of the U.S. presence in Iraq, was a key suspect in the April 2007 bombing of the national parliament.

At a news conference, al-Moussawi showed footage of purported confessions by two bodyguards of al-Dayni detailing heinous crimes allegedly ordered by the lawmaker: massacres of innocents in his home region, Diyala province; holdups of gold sellers in Baghdad; launchings of mortar rounds into the fortified Green Zone; and the parliament bombing, which killed Sunni lawmaker Mohammed Awad.

Al-Dayni responded with a news conference of his own the next day, denying wrongdoing and saying his guards had been forced to confess. “This is an alarm bell” for all opposition lawmakers, he said.

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