Saudi Arabia has given Iranian
diplomats two days to leave the country, amid a row over the Saudi
execution of a top Shia Muslim cleric.
The Saudi government announced on Sunday that it had broken off diplomatic ties with Iran.
Iran has accused Saudi Arabia of stoking tension in the region.
Saudi
Arabia and Iran are the major Sunni and Shia powers in the region
respectively and back opposing sides in the conflicts in Syria and
Yemen.
The US has appealed for calm, calling for continued diplomatic engagement.
Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr and 46 others were executed on Saturday after being convicted of terror-related offences.
Late
on Sunday, police came under heavy gunfire in his home town of Awamiya
in Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province, leaving one civilian dead and a
child injured, the Saudi Press Agency said.
Security forces are
still hunting the attackers, calling the incident a "terrorist" act, a
police spokesman was quoted as saying.
Shia Muslims have complained of marginalisation in Eastern Province.
'Interference'
Saudi
Arabia announced it was severing diplomatic relations with Iran after
demonstrators stormed the Saudi embassy in Tehran, and late on Sunday
gave Iranian diplomats 48 hours to leave.
It has also recalled its diplomats from Tehran.
Analysis: Lyse Doucet, BBC chief international correspondent
A diplomatic rupture between the major Sunni and
Shia powers in the region will resonate across the Middle East, where
they back opposing sides in many destructive wars and simmering
conflicts.
Players are already lining up along sectarian lines to support either Tehran or Riyadh.
Last
year had ended with a bit of hope that talks on ending Yemen's strife
had, at least, begun. Syria was to follow this month. It looks an awful
lot harder now.
In October Saudi sources told me they only
dropped their opposition to Iran's presence at Syria talks after the US
persuaded them to test Tehran's commitment. But they doubt Iran will do a
deal, and see it as key source of regional instability.
On the
other side, Iranian officials don't hide their contempt for the Saudi
system and its support for Islamist groups. There's been
barely-concealed anger for months. Now it's boiled over.
"Iran's history is full of
negative interference and hostility in Arab issues, and it is always
accompanied by destruction," he told a news conference.
US state
department spokesman John Kirby said: "We will continue to urge leaders
across the region to take affirmative steps to calm tensions".
"We believe that diplomatic engagement and direct conversations remain essential," he said.
'Martyr'
Earlier,
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned that the Sunni
Muslim kingdom would face "divine revenge" for the execution - an act
which also angered Shia Muslims elsewhere in the Middle East.
Ayatollah Khamenei called Sheikh Nimr a "martyr" who had acted peacefully.
Protesters
stormed the Saudi embassy in Tehran late on Saturday, setting fire to
the building before being driven back by police. The Saudi foreign
ministry said none of its diplomats had been harmed in the incident.
Iranian protesters set fire to the Saudi embassy in Tehran on Sunday |
Iran on Monday accused Saudi Arabia of using the
embassy incident to provoke further regional tension, Iranian state TV
reported.
It quoted a foreign ministry spokesman as saying: "Saudi
Arabia sees its life in pursuit of crises and confrontations and
attempts to resolve all of its internal problems by exporting them to
the outside."
Relations between the countries have been strained
over various issues in recent decades, including Iran's nuclear
programme and deaths of Iranians at the Hajj pilgrimage in 1987 and
again in 2015.
Diplomatic ties were severed between 1988 and 1991.
Most
of the 47 people executed by Saudi Arabia were Sunnis convicted of
involvement in al-Qaeda-linked terror attacks over the last decade.
Sheikh
Nimr was involved in anti-government protests that erupted in Saudi
Arabia in the wake of the Arab Spring, up to his arrest in 2012.
The execution also sparked protests in Iraq, Bahrain and several other countries.
Reference : http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-35219282
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