Good Morning Australia, IN THE NEWS:  Dozens are killed in an attack in a Syrian refugee camp - Four more people incredibly survive the collapsed building in Nairobi - Erdogan's keeping it all in the family - So are the Bush boys, and Trump isn't welcome - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

(Warning, disturbing video links ahead, and you might see something that doesn't go with breakfast) At least 28 people have been killed in an air attack on a refugee camp in northern Syria's Idlib province.  Images on social media showed smoking craterstents destroyed at the camp near Sarmada, as well as several badly injured people.  Local activists say the camp was mostly populated by women and children, and they believe the air strike was carried out by Syrian government forces or their Russian allies.  All this came hours after the US and Russia pushed to extend the truce over warring factions in Aleppo.  Show this to someone who still thinks war is a game.

The giant bushfire in northern Alberta, Canada has grown eight times larger overnight, to 850 square kilometers.  Alberta Premier Rachel Notley and firefighters say it's expected to burn out of control today as more than 100 firefighters, 10 helicopters and 16 air tankers are battling the flames in the woods.  Another 200 firefighters are on the ground in the city of Fort McMurray, parts of which were already decimated.  One major task will be to move up to 25,000 people now sheltering in the shale oil work camps north of Fort McMurray around the fire, and take them south to provincial capital Edmonton.  In all, more than 88,000 people have been evacuated so far.

Turkey's Ahmet Davutoglu confirmed reports he will step down as leader of Turkey's ruling AK Party and therefore as Prime Minister.  Davutoglu clashed with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's drive to create a powerful executive presidency (perhaps to compensate for that time he was kicked in the crotch by a horse).  The outgoing PM was also reportedly uncomfortable with increasing repression of journalists and the opposition.  Whoever replaces him will almost certainly be a Erdogan loyalist - and the front-runner is said to be Erdogan's son-in-law.  Observers are increasingly concerned that Europe's second-largest army and eighth-largest economy is increasingly becoming a family business.

Former US Presidents George H.W. Bush and his son George W. Bush will not endorse their party's presumptive presidential nominee Donald Trump, whose freak-show campaign appealing to racists and weirdos short-circuited the White House ambitions of a third member of the family Jeb Bush.  The Republican party is going through an existential crisis with Trump's victories over traditional candidates - many senior figures and ideological pundits are rejecting him in varying degrees, while lower-level careerists looking to jump ahead seem to have no problem hitching their wagons to a blatant fascist and racist.

Brazil's top court has suspended Eduard Cunha, the corruption-stained house speaker leading the impeachment effort against twice-elected President Dilma Rousseff for the entirely made-up offense of fiscal irresponsibility.  Cunha, on the other hand, is known to have numerous foreign bank accounts and is under investigation for money laundering and other crimes.  More than likely, it comes too late to save Dilma Rousseff:  The senate is expected to vote to suspend her for six months while the impeachment process moves forward.  Still, Dilma is vowing to fight on to keep her job.

A Guatemalan court once against suspended the trial of guilty-as-sin former dictator Jose Efrain Rios Montt on charges of ordering the murders of 1,771 indigenous Ixil Mayans during his bloody and corrupt rule in the 1980s.  The defense says it wants to separate his trial from that of his co-defendant and former intelligence chief.  But actually, the defense just wants to run out the clock, because Rios Montt is 89-years old.

Authorities in Pakistan arrested 15 members of a "tribal council" in a northern town for abducting a 16-year old girl and burning her to death - as punishment for helping two friends elope.  Police officials say the girl's mother and brother were also arrested for pretty much giving her over the the mob.  "I hadn't seen such a barbaric attack in my whole life," said district police chief Saaed Wazir.  The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan says more than 500 people were murdered in so-called "honor killings" last year.

Something to ponder:  If you didn't deposit millions of dollars that show up in your bank account one day, they're probably not yours.

Another thing:  Other than drug dealers, arms smugglers, pornographers, and libertarians, who is actually impacted by uncovering the inventor of the Bitcoin?

Speaking of drug dealers, Peru's military shot down a smuggling plane out of Bolivia and captured the pilot.

Rescuers in Nairobi pulled another four survivors out from under the rubble of a collapsed seven-storey building in the Kenyan capital.  One is a young woman who was eight months pregnant.  But 36 people died in last weekend's disaster, and another 70 are still missing.  The owner of the building was arrested because he obtained no building permit nor occupation licenses.