SULAIMANI (ESTA) — Iran has suspended talks with Saudi Arabia, a website affiliated to Iran’s top security body reported on Sunday.
The news comes a day after Saudi Arabia carried out mass executions that activists said included 41 Shia Muslims, and amid stalled talks on an Iranian nuclear deal in Vienna.
“Iran has unilaterally suspended talks with Saudi Arabia,” Nour news said, without providing a reason, according to Reuters.
It said no specific date had been scheduled for a new round of talks.
Sunni Muslim Saudi Arabia and Shia Iran, which are locked in proxy conflicts around the region, started direct talks last year to try to contain tensions.
Iraq’s foreign minister said on Saturday his country would host a new round on Wednesday.
Riyadh in 2016 severed ties with Iran after Iranian protesters stormed the Saudi embassy in Tehran following the execution of a Shia cleric in Saudi Arabia.
On Saturday, Saudi Arabia said it had executed 81 men in its biggest mass execution in decades. Activists and rights defenders said 41 were Shia Muslims from the eastern Qatif region, which has historically been a flashpoint between the Sunni-dominated government and minority Shia.
Saudi Arabia and Iran have backed opposing sides in regional conflicts and political disputes in Syria, Lebanon and Iraq for years, and Saudi Arabia has led an Arab coalition waging war against the Iran-aligned Houthi movement in Yemen since 2015.
Riyadh has said little progress has been made in the direct talks, which have focused largely on Yemen. Houthi authorities said on Saturday two Yemeni “prisoners of war” were among those executed by Saudi Arabia.
Meanwhile, talks to revive the 2015 Iran nuclear deal face the prospect of collapse after a last-minute Russian demand forced world powers to pause negotiations for an undetermined time despite having a largely completed text.
(Esta Media Network/Reuters)