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Saudi police kill 'terrorists' and destroy car carrying weapons

Saudi police say they took 'necessary action' resulting in explosion and death of two occupants in Qatif, a hotbed of unrest in Shia area
Unverified footage that circulated on social media showed thick smoke rising from a vehicle engulfed in flames (screengrab)

A car that exploded in a mainly Shia Muslim city in eastern Saudi Arabia killing its two occupants was carrying munitions, the interior ministry said on Friday.

The Thursday evening blast was the latest incident in Qatif, which has seen criminal violence as well as protests among the Sunni-dominated kingdom's Shia minority.

Police spotted the vehicle used "to carry out terrorist and criminal crimes" and then took "necessary action", a ministry statement said, without detailing what tactics were used.

"As a result, it caught fire and exploded," killing its two occupants.

"An investigation is under way to reveal the identity of those two individuals."

Police found firearms and ammunition, some of which exploded as a result of the blaze, the ministry said.

Unverified footage that circulated on social media showed thick smoke rising from a vehicle engulfed in flames, with periodic sounds of explosions.

Saudi Arabia's Eastern Province, where most of its Shia minority live, has been rocked by unrest since 2011.

The authorities refer to the protesters as "terrorists" but also use the term to refer to those engaged in criminal activity and to Sunni militants of the Islamic State group, who have carried out a number of attacks on Shia civilians.

Last month, violence escalated around a redevelopment project in the old Almosara section of Awamiya, a Qatif district town.

The interior ministry said criminals engaged in the drug and arms trade were involved in that unrest, which led to the death of a policeman in a rocket-propelled grenade strike, and two civilians killed by gunfire.

Three United Nations rights experts called on Saudi Arabia to halt demolition of the 400-year-old Almosara neighbourhood which, they said, reportedly caused "injury, deaths and material losses to the civilians".

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