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U.N. Says Syria Death Toll At Least 4,000 as EU Hardens Sanctions

The number of people killed in Syria following a crackdown on protesters since March has reached at least 4,000, the U.N. rights chief said on Thursday, as the European Union tightened sanctions against Syria's energy and financial sectors.

"We are placing the figure at 4,000. But the information coming to us is that it's much more," said United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay during a conference in Geneva.

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Yemen to Get Unity Cabinet by Sunday

A government of unity will be announced in Yemen before Sunday, the opposition said, in line with a peace deal that is to see President Ali Abdullah Saleh step down from power.

"There is a deal with the ruling party on the distribution of posts. Forming a cabinet will be very easy," Mohammed Qahtan, spokesman for the parliamentary opposition coalition, told Agence France Presse.

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Kuwait Urges Nationals to Leave Syria

Kuwait on Thursday appealed to its nationals to leave Syria and refrain from travelling there because of safety concerns amid a deadly eight-month crackdown on democracy protests.

"The foreign ministry calls on citizens currently present in Syria to leave for their own safety," it said in a statement quoted by the state-run KUNA news agency.

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Syria's Civilian Opposition, Rebels to Coordinate

Syria's civilian opposition and army rebels have agreed to coordinate their struggle against President Bashar Assad's regime, an official said Thursday.

The first meeting between the Syrian National Council and the Free Syrian Army earlier this week in Turkey appeared to mark a change of tack from the SNC's previous reluctance to back the armed struggle.

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Kuwait Frees 24 Held over Parliament Storming

Kuwait's public prosecutor on Thursday ordered the release on bail of 24 youth activists who had been held in detention over the storming of parliament last month, their lawyer said.

"A decision has just been issued to release all the 24 people on a bail of 1,000 dinars ($3,600) each," al-Humaidi al-Subaie, who heads the legal defense team of the activists, told Agence France Presse.

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Rights Groups Urge U.N. to Refer Syria Crackdown to ICC

Amnesty International and rights activists on Wednesday called on the U.N. Security Council to refer the Syrian government's deadly crackdown on protests to the International Criminal Court.

A Syrian activist forced into exile by President Bashar Assad's government said there has to be "regime change" in the country, but with no foreign intervention.

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Amnesty Accuses Saudi of Repression

Amnesty International has accused Saudi Arabia of conducting a campaign of repression against protesters and reformists since the Arab Spring erupted, in a newly published report.

"The last nine months has seen a new wave of repression in Saudi Arabia as authorities have cracked down on protesters and reformists on security grounds," the rights watchdog said in a statement issued late Wednesday.

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'Millions' Deposited in Kuwaiti MP Bank Accounts

Millions of dollars have been deposited suspiciously into the bank accounts of 15 Kuwaiti MPs suspected of money laundering, reports citing informed sources said on Thursday.

The central bank had told prosecutors that bank accounts held by the 15 lawmakers "have received suspicious deposits and the anti-money laundering law applies to them,"al-Jarida newspaper reported.

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Syria Sanctions Target Assad Brother, 16 Other Senior Figures

The brother of Syrian President Bashar Assad, several ministers and telecom magnate Rami Makhlouf are on a list of 17 senior figures to be targeted by Arab League sanctions, officials said Thursday.

Under the economic measures agreed this week by the 22-member organization, they would be banned from travelling in the region and have any assets in Arab countries frozen, if the list is confirmed at a meeting on Saturday.

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Barak: No Iran Strike 'for the Moment’

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak on Thursday ruled out a strike against Iran's nuclear facilities "for the moment," in remarks to public radio, but said that the Jewish state would keep all options open.

"We have no intention of acting for the moment... We should not engage in war when it is not necessary, but there may come a time or another when we are forced to face tests," Barak said.

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