Good Morning Australia!! - The West says the evidence is stacking up against Syria in the deadly chemical weapon attack - Ghana acts after some of its citizens try to sneak into Oz - An armed teacher makes a real good argument for not arming the teachers - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Russia says Syrian forces are now 100 percent back in control of Douma, the Syrian town in East Ghouta where a chemical weapon attack killed dozens of people last weekend and injured as many as 500.  The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) is sending inspectors to Syria and they would start work on Saturday.  But the mission could face difficulties, not least of which might come from the Russian military police who are already on the ground in Douma to act as "guarantors of law and order in this town".  Syria and the Russians have obstructed investigations of past chemical weapon attacks on rebel villages, former officials have said.

French President Emmanuel Macron says he has proof the Syrian government is responsible for the chemical attack, although he hasn't presented it nor identified the source.  Macron told reporters he will decide "in due course" whether to respond with air strikes to the apparent breach of international law.  Western allies are believed to be planning coordinated missile strikes, mainly because the orange clown Donald Trump telegraphed his intentions a day earlier.

Preserving evidence from the Douma attack is crucial.  Lab tests of blood and urine samples from some of the hundreds of impacted people show evidence of Chlorine Gas, according to intelligence officials who spoke with NBC News in the US.  Doctors in Douma have been attempting to smuggle some of the bodies of the dead out so that the attack cannot be covered up.  Both Russia and Syria deny a chemical attack took place, and have gone as far as to accuse emergency responders to human tragedies of staging the evidence.

Meanwhile, the OPCW is backing the UK's claim that a Russian nerve agent was used to poison a former double agent and his daughter in Salisbury last month.  Four laboratories "agree explicitly with the UK's analysis", adding that the chemical used in the attack was a "military-grade nerve agent of high purity".  London says Sergei Skripal and his daughter were poisoned with Novichok, a nerve agent invented by the former Soviet Union and passed down to Russia.  Sergei Skripal is still in hospital; Yulia has been released to a secure location and is refusing consular assistance from the Russian Embassy.

Ghana's President Nana Akufo-Addo has suspended two top sports officials after the debacle in which dozens of Ghanaians tried to get into Australia posing as journalists covering the Commonwealth Games.  Three other officials have been ordered to leave Australia and return home to assist police investigations.

Berlin is changing the names of several streets in the so-called "African Quarter" because they were named after people who committed atrocities in Namibia.  Germany occupied the African nation from 1884 through 1919, presiding over the genocides of hundreds of thousands of indigenous Herero and Nama people.  A joint effort by The Greens, Die Linke (The Left), and the Social Democrats declared, "The African Quarter still glorifies colonialism and its crimes," and, "That conflicts with our understanding of democracy and does lasting harm to the image of the city of Berlin."  The streets will be renamed for Namibian freedom fighters and their battlecry, "Maji Maji."

Dozens of opposition party lawmakers in Brazil have legally changed their names, adding "Lula" to their signatures so that it appears in government documents.  They're doing this in solidarity with former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who began a twelve year prison sentence last weekend off of corruption charges he and supporters say were trumped up to knock him out of this year's presidential election.  The 72-year-old Lula governed Brazil from 2003-2011, and oversaw unprecedented economic growth and elimination of extreme poverty while expanding healthcare and education to all classes.  Lula was the front-runner ahead of the presidential elections scheduled for October.

Investigators asked eight police officers in Argentina why a quarter ton of confiscated Marijuana was missing from the evidence lock-up.  The officers answered that it must have been eaten by mice.  And they were fired.  Forensic experts doubted mice would view that reefer as food, and if they did there would have been quite a few dead mice found at the scene.  Or at least a few happy, well-adjusted mice.

A teacher from Florida's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School - where a massacre of 17 students and teachers led to calls from some quarters to arm the teachers - has been arrested for leaving his gun in a public rest room.  Before 43-year old Sean Simpson could retrieve it, a homeless man picked up the Glock 9-millimeter handgun and fired it to see if it was loaded.  Simpson was charged with failing to safely store a firearm, 69-year old Joseph Spataro was charged with firing a weapon while intoxicated.

Bolingo the Gorilla likes to ape his trainer Rachel Hale's moves at Busch Gardens in Florida.