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Seven Dead in Yemen Clashes

At least seven people were killed in Yemen, including four police who clashed with a dissident army unit, military sources and medics said on Wednesday.

"Police attacked an army checkpoint in Amran province," 170 kilometers north of Sanaa late on Tuesday, "killing one officer and wounding two soldiers," a military official told Agence France Presse.

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Mubarak and Two Sons Detained for 15 Days

Egypt's ex-president Hosni Mubarak has been placed in detention for 15 days, prosecutors said Wednesday shortly after state media reported his two sons had also been detained.

In a statement on the public prosecutor's Facebook page, a spokesman said the prosecutor Abdul Maguid Mahmoud authorized the detentions "as part of an inquiry into the use of force against protesters during the unrest in January and February."

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Gulf States Want Baghdad Summit Scrapped, Says Bahrain

Gulf Arab states have demanded the cancelation of an Arab summit due in Baghdad next month, Bahrain's official BNA news agency quoted the foreign minister as saying on Tuesday.

"Gulf Cooperation Council countries have demanded that the Arab summit which is due to be held in Iraq be cancelled," BNA quoted Sheikh Khaled bin Ahmed al-Khalifa as saying.

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U.S. Condemns ‘Outrageous’ Repression of Syria Protests

The White House condemned escalating repression of demonstrations in Syria Tuesday as "outrageous" and expressed concern about reports that the wounded were being denied medical care.

"We are deeply concerned by reports that Syrians who have been wounded by their government are being denied access to medical care," press secretary Jay Carney said in a statement.

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Syria's Banias Besieged, Nearby Village Raked with Gunfire amid New Demos

Syrian security forces locked down the protest flashpoint town of Banias and raked the nearby village of Baida with gunfire on Tuesday, witnesses told Agence France Presse by telephone.

"Security forces and armed men are firing machine guns indiscriminately at the village," a witness said.

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Human Rights Watch: Syria Blocking Medical Treatment for Protesters

Syrian security forces in at least two towns prevented medics from reaching wounded protesters when clashes erupted at anti-government demonstrations last week, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said.

The New York based rights group said the "inhumane" and "illegal" blocking of access to medical treatment occurred in the southern town of Daraa, the center of a wave of protests against President Bashar al-Assad, and Harasta near Damascus.

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Britain, France Press NATO Allies on Libya Strikes

Britain and France called on NATO allies Tuesday to pull their weight in the bombing mission in Libya in a sign of growing disquiet over the campaign as the conflict drags on.

NATO has led air strikes against Moammar Gadhafi's forces for almost two weeks since taking control of the operation from a U.S.-led coalition that had been bombing the regime's heavy weaponry since March 19.

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Britain Warns Against Travel to Syria

Britain warned Tuesday against all but essential travel to Syria after a bloody weekend crackdown on anti-regime demonstrators.

"In light of the deteriorating security situation in Syria we have decided to change the overall level of our travel advice: we now advise against all but essential travel to Syria," Foreign Office Minister for Middle East and North Africa Alistair Burt said.

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Ex-Head of Mubarak's Party Detained for Corruption

The head of Egypt's former ruling party, Safwat al-Sherif, a longtime stalwart of the regime of ousted president Hosni Mubarak, has been detained on charges of corruption, state TV said on Tuesday.

Sherif was detained late on Monday for 15 days "on charges of misusing public funds", TV said, as footage showed Sherif -- his face covered by a jacket -- being escorted into a police vehicle.

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Talk of Gadhafi Stepping Down 'Ridiculous', Says His Son

Libyan leader Moammer Gadhafi's son Seif al-Islam admitted Monday that it was time for "new blood" in his country's leadership but said talk of his father stepping down was "ridiculous".

"The Libyan Guide does not want to control everything. He is at an advanced age. We would like to bring a new elite of young people onto the scene to lead the country and direct local affairs," Seif told French network BFM.

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