Iranian state television also said Kuwait's foreign ministry summoned Tehran's ambassador and ordered the number of diplomats to be cut from 19 to four and the closure of the cultural and military missions. State news agency KUNA, citing a foreign ministry source, said Kuwait had also decided to freeze any activities involving joint committees between the two countries. "Kuwait claims that Iran has tried to interfere in the internal affairs of the country," Iranian state television reported.
Last month Kuwait's supreme court sentenced the mastermind of the so-called "Abdaly cell" to life in jail and condemned 20 others to various prison terms for alleged links with Iran and Lebanese Shiite militia Hezbollah, and plotting terror attacks in Kuwait. State Minister for Cabinet Affairs Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah Al-Sabah, who is also acting information minister, confirmed Kuwait had taken diplomatic action against Iran. "Following the supreme court ruling on the case... the government of Kuwait has decided to take measures, in accordance with diplomatic norms and the Vienna Convention, towards its relations with the Islamic Republic of Iran," Sheikh Mohammad told AFP.
The row comes at a time when Kuwait is trying to mediate an end to the Gulf's worst diplomatic crisis in years, after Saudi Arabia and its allies cut ties with Qatar over accusations it is too close to Iran and funds extremists. A local newspaper reported on Monday that 14 of the cell's 26 members had fled to Iran by sea. They were convicted by a lower court early last year but acquitted on appeals several months later and set free.
The cassation court, whose rulings are final, overturned their acquittal on June 18 and sentenced them to between five and 15 years in prison. The interior ministry confirmed on Tuesday that the 14 men were on the run but it said that they had not left the country through official exit points. The cell was busted in August 2015 and large quantities of arms, ammunition and explosives were seized from them, according to the Kuwaiti authorities.
Kuwaiti courts convicted them of working for Iran's Revolutionary Guards and Hezbollah. They were also convicted of smuggling explosives from Iran. The only Iranian member of the cell was sentenced to death in absentia by the lower court early last year. Unlike fellow Gulf partners Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, Kuwait maintained good relations with Iran.
In February, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani visited Kuwait a month after the state launched a dialogue with Iran in a bid to normalize Gulf-Iran relations. In March 2011, a Kuwaiti court condemned four people of forming a spy cell for Iran. That led to the expulsion of ambassadors by the two countries but they returned a few months later. Around a third of Kuwait's native population of 1.35 million is Shiite. - Agencies