Good Morning Australia!! - They're having a hot time in Hamburg tonight, as protesters rock the G20 - Poland's first lady casts some shade on Trump - A girl is sentenced to prison for stillbirth - A White Tiger is spotted in the wild - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Thousands of protesters have descended on Hamburg, Germany for the G20 summit with a message to world leaders:  "Welcome to hell!"  Some Black Bloc protesters hurled bottles and rocks, and there have been some skirmishes; cops responded with water cannons and a little tear gas.  Hamburg police seemed more interested in maintaining their lines than with busting heads.  Later on, after dark, the clashes became more intense - definitely hosier and gassier.
Water Cannon Fun
Although most of the action is on a waterfront area of the port city, the central IKEA store and several luxury autos were damaged around Hamburg.

Prime Minister Minister Malcolm Turnbull met with the host of the economic summit, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, before the talks begin on Friday. 
Malcolm and Angela at a public event anyone could have seen
Malcolm expects North Korea's successful test of a nuclear-capable intercontinental ballistic missile - which he calls "reckless and provocative" - to be the main topic of conversation and expects leaders to "strengthen the sanctions that have already been applied to the North Korean regime".  He's also calling on China to "bring economic pressure in particular to bear" on Pyongyang.

Donald Trump reportedly held meetings with the leaders of South Korea and Japan on Thursday night in Hamburg, to discuss the North Korean situation.  Earlier, Trump warned he is considering "some pretty severe things", without providing any details, in response to Pyongyang's "very, very bad behavior".  But Trump already blew a massive opportunity for the US economy as Japan and the European Union announced a colossal trade pact to lessen tariffs on for a sweeping array of products, including pork, wine, cheese and automobiles.  American products will have to compete at a higher price in those markets, representing 30 percent of the world's economy.  Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called it "the birth of the world’s largest free advanced industrialized economic zone".

Earlier in Warsaw, the orange clown was rebuffed as Polish First Lady Agata Kornhauser-Duda appeared to rebuff his attempt to shake her hand, leaving the thin-skinned dope glowering as she went directly to greet Melania Trump.  And the world had a laugh.

ANYWAY...

"We are announcing an end to the sale of petrol and diesel cars by 2040," said France's Ecology Minister Nicolas Hulot in announcing a major commitment to meets its obligations under the Paris Climate Accord to limit the country's output of Greenhouse Gases.  For Paris, it's also a health issue as choking smog is a problem that forces capital officials to limit the use of cars and trucks.  "It places France among the leaders of climate action in the world," said Pascal Canfin, the head of WWF France and a former Green politician.

Heavy rain and flooding forced the evacuation of 500,000 people in Kyushu, southwestern Japan.  Six people are confirmed dead in floods and landslides.  At least 20 people are missing, including a small child last seen being washed down a flooded stream.  More than 50 centimeters of rain fell in a twelve hour period on Wednesday, filling two rivers over their banks, washing bridges away, and sending steep hillsides crashing down. 

A man in India spotted and managed to get a photo of an extremely rare pale Tiger in the wild - a natural white tiger, and not that mis-bred stuff from Las Vegas or unethical zoos. 
Nilanjan Ray
Wildlife photographer Nilanjan Ray caught the image while in Nilgiri biosphere reserve in Tamil Nadu state.  "It is the palest tiger I have ever seen on the record or heard about in literature," said Belinda Wright, the founder of the Wildlife Protection Society of India.  Reserve officials know about the Tiger and are monitoring it, but they will not give out the location of its range so as to avoid unwanted attention from tourists as well as the risk of poachers.

A human rights atrocity in El Salvador:  A teenage rape victim has been sentenced to 30 years in prison for murder after having a stillbirth.  The court ruled that Evelyn Beatriz Hernandez Cruz didn't seek a doctor immediately, and that was equal to murder.  At the time she was 16-years old and didn't realize she was pregnant until delivering the dead infant on the toilet.  "The judgment sentencing Evelyn to 30 years in prison shows how in El Salvador justice is applied without direct proof, without sufficient evidence that clarifies what a woman has done," said Morena Herrera, executive director of the Citizens' Group for the Decriminalization of Abortion.  Women in El Salvador lost all of their reproductive rights in 1997 after a shadowy campaign by a small group of powerful anti-choice groups linked to the Catholic church.

The US-based arts and craft chain The Hobby Lobby will pay a US$3 Million fine after getting caught importing smuggled ancient religious artifacts from war-torn Iraq.  The chain is owned by the Green family of Oklahoma, politically powerful evangelical christians who successfully challenged the Affordable Care Act's (Obamacare) requirement that employers provide birth control to female workers as part of their health care benefits.  They can't claim religious exemptions on this one:  The US restricted the import of Iraqi cultural assets on 1990 and banned it outright in 2004.

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has ruled that South Africa's government was wrong when it failed to arrest Sudan President Omar al-Bashir when he visited the country in 2015.  But the ICC will not refer the case to the UN Security Council, leaving it at a rebuke.  South Africa acted unlawfully because it is an ICC member, knew the rules, and knew there was a warrant out for al-Bashir on three counts of Genocide in Darfur in 2010.  But many African nations have taken a dim view of the ICC in recent years, because of the disproportionate prosecutions against African leaders compare to the rest of the world.

Baby Pygmy Hippo at the Buin Zoo in Santiago, Chile.