Bombings in Iraq killed eight people on Wednesday as authorities released figures showing nearly 70,000 people died in violence from 2004 to 2011, markedly fewer than numbers from other sources.
The latest bloodshed comes a month before Baghdad hosts an Arab summit, the first such non-emergency Arab meeting to be held in the Iraqi capital in more than 30 years, and less than a week after a wave of attacks claimed by al-Qaida killed 42 people nationwide.

The United States is drawing up a new draft U.N. Security Council resolution on Syria demanding humanitarian access to protest cities where thousands have been killed, diplomats said Tuesday.
If put to a vote it would be the third time Western nations have tried to get a Security Council resolution on the 11 month old crisis.

Kuwait's public attorney has asked a special judicial tribunal to probe allegations the former premier transferred public funds into his overseas accounts, press reports said on Wednesday.
The action by Dherar al-Asousi came after he received a complaint from a Kuwaiti lawyer who claimed he had evidence to substantiate the allegations, the al-Watan newspaper reported.

The White House said Tuesday that al-Qaida's efforts to take advantage of violence in Syria mean it is no time to send arms to opponents of Syrian President Bashar Assad.
"Without getting into assessments of our intelligence capabilities, I would simply say that we are aware of the fact that al-Qaida and other extremists are seeking to take advantage of the situation created by Assad's brutal assault on the opposition," said White House spokesman Jay Carney.

The Palestinian leadership on Tuesday called on the U.N. Security Council to visit the occupied territories to see the impact of Israel's settlement campaign.
The Palestinian U.N. envoy, Riyad Mansour, made the request as U.N. under secretary general for political affairs, B. Lynne Pascoe, told the Security Council that events in Gaza and the West Bank are "dangerous and ultimately unsustainable."

The Egyptian judges trying dozens of democracy activists, including Americans, in a case that has strained ties with Washington recused themselves from the trial Tuesday, judicial sources said.
In such instances, the trial, which opened on Sunday, is normally referred to the court of appeals, which appoints a new panel of judges.

Egypt's newly elected senate chose an Islamist as its speaker on Tuesday, extending the religious conservatives' power over the legislature tasked with appointing a panel to draft a new constitution.
Ahmed Fahmy of the dominant Islamist Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) was chosen to lead the 270-seat senate after Islamists won most of the 180 elected seats in the chamber. The ruling military will appoint the remaining senators.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Tuesday an argument could be made for declaring President Bashar al-Assad a war criminal, but said such action could complicate a solution in Syria.
"Based on definitions of war criminal and crimes against humanity, there would be an argument to be made that he would fit into that category," Clinton told a Senate hearing on the State Department budget.

The United Nations said Tuesday that well over 7,500 people have been killed in the brutal Syrian crackdown amid new international demands for the Damascus government to allow humanitarian access.
France urged Russia and China to back a U.N. Security Council resolution on halting the bloodshed and getting rescue aid into protest cities. Russia and China have vetoed two resolutions on Syria, but appear to be softening their stance.

France on Tuesday urged Russia and China to accept a new U.N. Security Council resolution on halting the violence in Syria to allow in humanitarian aid.
"A resolution for a humanitarian ceasefire and access for humanitarian aid in the most threatened areas is under discussion at the Security Council. We can hope that China and Russia will not veto this resolution," Foreign Minister Alain Juppe told RTL radio.
