Good Morning Australia!! - The Greens shake things up - Amazing rescues and heartbreaking delays in the Italian earthquake - The UN finds evidence of atrocities in Syria  - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

In a major Greens shake-up, Senator Sarah Hanson-Young has lost the immigration portfolio for which she fought so hard.  Greens leader Richard DiNatale gave the job to Tasmanian Senator Nick McKim, so that Hanson-Young can directly take on Labor's Tanya Plibersek on education policy.  Her new portfolio will also include finance, so that Hanson-Young will go head to head against Liberal senator Mathias Cormann, and will also take on the trade minister Steve Ciobo.  Senator Hanson-Young said she fought to keep immigration, but is proud of the work that has "exposed the systematic abuse of women and children" in the Australian detention center on Nauru .

Searchers found a Czech hiker who went missing a month ago along the Routeburn Track on New Zealand's south island.  The woman and her husband set out on 24 July - four days later, he fell down a slope and died, and she made it to a warden's hut near Lake Mackenzie, and hunkered down there as heavy snow moved in.  She couldn't figure out how to work the radio in the hut, and was therefore unable to call for help.  Teams didn't start looking for them until this week, because no one knew they were missing - the unnamed couple didn't register and didn't have emergency radios.  New Zealand's Department of Conservation warns that during winter, the Routeburn Track "should only be attempted by fit, experienced, and well-equipped people" .

Rescuers in Pescara del Tronto pulled a ten-year old girl alive out from under the rubble of this week's big earthquake in central Italy.  But strong aftershocks are hampering and delaying the recovery work.  At least 250 people are dead, and 5,000 rescue and recovery workers have really only scratched the surface of debris from all of those ancient stone buildings that came down.  More than 300 people have been treated in hospital.

France's highest administrative court will take up objections to the "Burkini Ban" enacted by now 26 towns and cities where conservatives have the electoral majorities.  But Leftists, such as Prime Minister Manuel Valls, back the bans because the swimwear marketed to Islamic puritans represents oppression of women.  And yet others think that either way, it's just bullshyte mansplaining and legislating what women can and cannot wear.  And the daily newspaper Liberation said on Thursday that the local laws were "stupid" and a gift to Islamist propaganda.  Cops have handed out dozens of citations to women for perceived violations on the Burkini Ban.

UN investigators say the Syrian government twice used chlorine in attacks on its own people, and Islamic State used Mustard gas in an attack during the Syrian Civil War.  The UN security council established a joint UN-Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) investigation a year ago, and looked into nine chemical weapons attacks, establishing guilt in three but unable to find conclusive evidence in the rest.  The US and its allies are urging the Security Council to take "swift and strong" action over the report.

Witnesses say a 59-year old woman disconnected her safety equipment before falling to her death from a zip line in the eastern United States.  Her daughter says Tina Werner was completing her "bucket list" by zipping over the tree tops in a forest in the state of Delaware, but plunged more than 10 meters.