Jihadists shot dead two people in a car they stopped at a roadblock near Roman ruins in Tunisia and two policemen who later sped to the scene, the interior ministry said Sunday.
The killings occurred on Saturday night in the Jendouba area of western Tunisia near Bulla Regia, the site of historic Roman ruins, it said in a statement.
Tunisia has been wracked by violence blamed on jihadist groups since the January 2011 Arab Spring revolution that ousted long-time dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.
The statement said a National Guard patrol was sent to investigate reports that a civilian and a prison warden had been shot dead by an armed group at a roadblock set up by armed men in Jendouba.
"On their arrival at the scene, four terrorists opened fire," killing two policemen and wounding another two, it said.
Security operations were under way to track down the armed group, the ministry said.
The attack, it said, took place near the archaeological site of Bulla Regia, a former Roman city some 40 kilometers (25 miles) from the Algerian border and 150 kilometers west of the capital Tunis.
The site is notable for its characteristic villas which are constructed partly underground, as well as for its mosaics.
Much of the violence in Tunisia is blamed on Ansar Al-Sharia, a jihadist outfit accused of having links to al-Qaida.
The government insists Ansar Al-Sharia was behind the separate assassinations last year of two secular politicians but the group never claimed responsibility for those or any other attacks.
The assassinations came as Tunisia was grappling with the political transition after the 2011 uprising that toppled the autocratic regime of Ben Ali, and a surge in Islamist violence.
The killings plunged Tunisia into a crisis from which it is only now emerging, with the adoption in January of a new constitution after a government of independents took the oath to steer the country towards fresh elections.
Also last year, around 20 members of the security forces were killed during operations targeting a group of Islamist militants in the Chaambi mountains on the border with Algeria.
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