Hello Australia!! - New concerns over Angela Merkel's health - A "qualified drug mule" in Jair Bolsonaro's entourage - Trump whinges in Osaka - Amazing video of a toddler rescued from a dangerous plunge - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

A searing heatwave has set in over Europe from Portugal and Spain through Poland and across the Baltic to the Nordic countries, and officials fear conditions will worsen.  Spain's Catalonia region banked under a high temperature of 45 C Degrees.  Firies are battling the region's worst wildfire in 20 years, trying to keep a 6,500 hectare blaze from spreading into a 20,000 hectare conflagration.  Across the Pyrenees in southern France, "Calls to the emergency services are on the rise nationwide," said Public Health head Jerome Saloman, "We are seeing the beginning of a clear impact of the heatwave.  For us the worst is still to come."  Temperature records are being set pretty much everywhere: Ireland and Scotland, Norway and Sweden, even the wheat fields of eastern Europe.  

There are new concerns over the health of German Chancellor Angela Merkel after she was seen shaking uncontrollably at another public function - the second time in eight days.  Ms. Merkel grabbed her arms as she stood next to President Frank-Walter Steinmeier in Berlin; an aide eventually offered her a glass of water, which was refused.  Last week, the German government claimed Merkel was "dehydrated" when she started shaking while at an outdoor event with Ukraine's president.  This time, spokesman Steffen Seibert said: "All is going ahead as planned.  The federal chancellor is fine," as she set off for the G20 Summit in Japan.

Authorities in Spain found 39 kilos of cocaine in one of the planes used by Brazil's far-right President Jair Bolsonaro's entourage en route to the G20 in Osaka, at a layover in Seville.  Spain's defense ministry arrested 38-year-old Sergeant Silva Rodrigues of Brazil's Air Force.  Ex-military officer Bolsonaro was on another plane and claims he knew nothing about it; back in Brazilia, the government threw the Sergeant under the (air)bus: "It's obvious that, given the amount of drugs he had on him, that he didn't just buy them around the corner and take them with him," said Vice President Hamilton Mourao.  "He was working as a qualified drug mule, let's put it that way."

Donald Trump arrived at the G20 in Osaka, and promptly headed off to a dinner with Prime Minister Scott Morrison, which apparently went well.  However, Trump pretty much trashed the rest of his allies and partners:  He imagined that that if the United States were attacked, Japan would only "watch it on a Sony television", instead of coming to the US' defense; Trump blasted Germany a security freeloader; and he whinged on about India for raising tariffs on American goods.  Not coincidentally, he has meetings with leaders of all three nations on Friday.  Trump didn't trash Russian President Vladimir Putin or Saudi Crown Prince Muhammad.

While Trump was praising Australia's immigration policy, a former Manus Island detainee told the 41st session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.  Sudanese refugee Abdul Aziz Muhamat was recently granted asylum in Switzerland, but says he will continue to speak for people trapped in the situation he escaped:  "They are being completely destroyed, physically and mentally," adding, "Twelve people have died.  Over 100 have attempted suicide on Manus Island in just the last month.  How many more will it take?"  Australia has come under intense criticism from human rights activists at the Council session over the treatment and condition of the detainees.

A Russian passenger plane overshot the runway at an airport in Siberia, crashing and killing two crew members.

A teenager is being called a hero for doing the right thing at the right place and time.  17-year old Feuzi Zabaat was walking in Istanbul, Turkey when he saw a toddler too close to a window in a building.  He walked underneath, which turned out to be just in time to catch two-year old Doha Muhammed who stumbled over the ledge.  The little girl was not harmed, and apparently brushed off the whole thing as toddlers do.  A witness said Feuzi was a "lion of a person", and the grateful family came up with a reward.