Morocco has severed diplomatic relations with Iran, accusing the Iranian diplomatic mission in Rabat of seeking to spread Shi'ism Islam in the predominantly Sunni Muslim kingdom.
A statement from Morocco's foreign ministry accused on Friday the Iranian embassy of "intolerable interference in the internal affairs of the kingdom", and of engaging in activities which threatened the religious unity of the country.
"The Kingdom of Morocco has decided to break its diplomatic relations with the Islamic Republic of Iran beginning this Friday," the ministry said.
Moroccan local media has repeatedly accused Iran of proselytizing in recent years, claims rejected by the Iranian ambassador.
The controversy was fuelled recently by comments attributed to an adviser of Iran's supreme leader, which questioned the sovereignty of Bahrain, a Gulf Arab state.
Morocco, however, has no official Shia population, with 99 per cent of the country are Sunnis, and the rest either Jews or Christians.
Sunni scholars in Morocco have denounced what they say is an effort to convert people to Shi'ism, arguing that such a practice could ultimately lead to sectarian strife similar to that witnessed in Iraq after the US-led invasion in 2003.
Furthermore, as Mohamed VI, Morocco's king, is the country's official religious leader, any attempt to convert Sunni Muslims has been equated to an attack on the monarchy, the foreign ministry said.
Morocco and Iran have had rocky ties since the Iranian revolution in 1979. The two only normalized relations in the late 1990s.
PHOTO CAPTION
Bahraini men march in the city of Muharraq, east of Manama, to condemn comments by a senior Iranian official that the island state had once been under Persian rule, in February 2009.
Al-Jazeera