A Saudi police officer has been shot dead in the Makkah region, the interior ministry said on Friday, after four suspected jihadists died during a raid in the same area. Corporal Khalaf al-Harithi was on duty in the western region on Thursday evening when he was hit by gunfire from an unknown source, a ministry statement said.

An investigation is under way. It occurred several hours after officers shot dead two "terrorists" in an exchange of fire at their hideout between the holy city of Makkah and the mountain resort of Taif, about 80 kilometres (50 miles) to the east, the ministry said. Two other suspects killed themselves by detonating suicide belts, it said.

On Friday, the ministry identified the four, saying they had been wanted by police. Saeed al-Shahrani, 49, was sought in connection with the suicide bombing of a mosque inside a Saudi special forces compound in the southwestern city of Abha last August. Fifteen people died.

He was also wanted over an October suicide bombing which killed two at an Ismaili Shiite mosque in the southern city of Najran, and the February shooting of a retired security officer in the Jizan region. Groups claiming affiliation with the so-called Islamic State claimed those attacks. Also killed was Mohammed al-Inzi, 46, wanted over suicide bombings at Shiite mosques that killed 25 people last May and June.

Police said he was also involved in the November 2014 shooting of seven Shiite worshippers, which began the series of attacks allegedly linked to IS in the Sunni-dominated kingdom. The other dead suspects were Mubarak al-Dosari, 25, and Adil al-Majmaj, 27.

Majmaj had been arrested in 2013 during a protest demanding the release of Islamist prisoners. He was an associate of one of two men killed in a shootout with police who foiled a car bombing in Bisha, southwestern Aseer region, on April 29. The interior ministry said Majmaj "disappeared from sight and moved around disguised as a woman - wearing a suicide belt". After Thursday's raid police said they found two suicide belts, 15 other "explosive devices" and six firearms.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2016


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