Two Indians and a Saudi policeman were wounded by gunfire in the east of the kingdom as authorities hunted suspects linked to unrest by minority Shiites, the interior ministry said on Tuesday.
A police traffic patrol "came under heavy fire from a farming area" in the Shiite-populated Qatif district on Monday evening, the ministry's spokesman said.
The Indians were passers-by, he said.
An Indian embassy official confirmed that two nationals were wounded and are in stable condition.
"We are following it up," he said.
The ministry spokesman did not identify the perpetrators but warned the public not to provide assistance to people on a list of 23 wanted suspects issued in 2011 after Shiite unrest.
Saudi Arabia's Shiite minority, who complain of marginalization in the Sunni-dominated kingdom, began protests that year in Eastern Province, where most of them live.
Many suspects on the wanted list have already been detained or killed in shootouts.
Last month, Saudi Arabia's Supreme Court confirmed a death sentence against Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr, a leader of anti-government protests convicted of sedition and other crimes.
Activists are calling for the sentence not to be carried out, saying Nimr engaged only in peaceful opposition.
He is one of seven Shiites sentenced to death in connection with Shiite unrest since 2011, activists say. Three of the convicts were under the age of 18 at the time of their arrests.
Over the past year, Saudi Shiites have been targeted by suicide bombings and shootings claimed by the Islamic State group, which considers them heretics.
In the latest attack, a gunman killed five Shiites in the Qatif area last month during commemorations of Ashura, one of the holiest observances of their faith.
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