Protestors storm Saudi embassy in Tehran, set fires and smash windows after execution of prominent cleric
Angry demonstrations across Iran in response to execution, meanwhile protestors break in to Saudi Arabian embassy, smashing windows, starting fires.

Protesters have smashed windows and ignited fires in the Saudi Arabian Embassy in Tehran on Saturday after the execution of a prominent Shiite cleric ignited sectarian tensions across the already inflamed region.
The break-in and arson has been seen as jeopardizing U.S. diplomacy aimed at tamping down conflicts in the Middle East.
The unrest erupted after Saudi authorities announced that Sheik Nimr Baqr al-Nimr, 56, was among 47 people put to death.
Some were killed by firing squad, others by beheading, according to a statement from Saudi Arabia’s Interior Ministry. Most were Sunnis accused of participating in al-Qaida attacks in the kingdom.
Nimr, however, was one of four Shiites put to death for political activism and the leading figure in the anti-government demonstrations that swept the mostly Shiite east of the country in 2011, inspired by the Arab Spring protests elsewhere in the region.
The death sentence was carried out despite international appeals for clemency and repeated warnings from the kingdom’s arch enemy in the region, Iran, that there would be consequences if the popular cleric were killed.
