Syria on Saturday announced it was canceling the BBC`s accreditation over what it called "misleading reports", a rare move against an international media outlet in the war-torn country.
"Due to the broadcaster`s failure to adhere to professional standards and its insistence on providing biased and misleading reports", the information ministry has decided to "cancel the accreditation" of the BBC`s "correspondent and cameraman", it said in a statement.
Accreditation of the BBC Radio correspondent in Syria was also revoked, the ministry added.
There was no immediate response from the BBC.
The information ministry said that since Syria`s war broke out in 2011, the BBC has "from time to time provided subjective and fake information and reports about the reality" in the country.
The conflict has killed more than 500,000 people, displaced millions, and devastated much of the country`s infrastructure and industry.
The BBC was warned "more than once" but "continued to broadcast its misleading reports based on statements… from terrorist entities and those hostile to Syria", the ministry added.
Revoking the accreditation of international media representatives is rare for Damascus, where the few remaining foreign media outlets have locally based-correspondents.
Many foreign journalists quit the country as the war spiraled, pulling in foreign powers and global jihadists.