Good Morning Australia!! - The death toll in the Mogadishu bombing skyrockets - Tillerson will work with North Korea "until the first bomb drops" - Israel's PM lashes out at police in a growing corruption investigation - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

The terrorist bombing in Somalia has killed at least 231 people, with officials sharply revising the death toll as more bodies were discovered underneath the flattened buildings at the target in Mogadishu, a busy street lined with government ministries and businesses.  This truck bombing is the biggest to strike the country and stunned a nation that had withstood dozens of smaller attacks in its capital. 
Mogadishu/Twitter
Mogadishu/Twitter
"This is really horrendous, unlike any other time in the past," said Dr. Mohamed Yusuf, the director of Madina hospital, where hundreds of people gathered to donate blood to the emergency effort.
Mogadishu/Twitter
"In our 10 year experience as the first responder in #Mogadishu, we haven't seen anything like this," tweeted the Aamin Ambulance service. 
Mogadishu/Twitter
The government blames al-Shabaab, but the Islamist terrorist group has not commented. 

Another actor has stepped forward to accuse fallen Hollywood mogul harvey Weinstein.  Lysette Anthony, most recently of the soap opera "Hollyoaks" but with a lengthy resume in TV and film, told the London Sunday Times that Weinstein raped her during an encounter in the late 1980s.  Last week, UK police confirmed they had received that a woman had reported a historic sexual assault that took place in the 1980s.  Contacted by the Sunday Times, Weinstein's people repeated their blanket denial of allegations of non-consensual sex.

Austria's conservatives and possibly the far-right as well goosestepped their way to victory in the weekend elections.  31-year old People's Party leader Sebastian Kurz is on track to become Europe's youngest leader, coming out with the most votes over his promises to get tough on immigration and cut taxes.  But his party got 30.5 percent of the vote, not enough to rule outright - so Kurz will have to form a coalition to become chancellor.  The question is whether it will be with the second place Social Democrats or the third place, hard-right, openly fascist and xenophobic Freedom Party - which has already said it will cut a deal to enter government for a five-year term.  In other European countries, the far-right has been locked out of government by the mainstream conservatives' distaste and refusal to form coalitions.

Teutonic lefties did better in Germany, where the Social Democrats ended a four-election losing streak and won a state election in Lower Saxony.  Projections indicate the Social Dems and Greens will have just enough to form a working coalition, and the far right fascist scumbags in the Alternative for Germany (AfD) were trounced.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said diplomatic efforts to contain North Korea's nuclear program will continue "until the first bomb drops".  Appearing on CNN's State of the Union, Tillerson brushed aside his boss Donald Trump's tweets that seemed to undercut diplomacy and said Trump "has made it clear to me to continue my diplomatic efforts".  However, Tillerson also passed up another chance to deny that he called trump a "moron", instead saying he won't dignify the question with an answer.  But he did deny having his schlong cut off.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told visiting US Christian journalists he intends to form a parliamentary committee to investigate "foreign funding" of human rights NGOs.  These groups document and are frequently critical of the Israeli military's violence against Palestinian civilians and abuse of Palestinian militants prisoners.  But their funding comes primarily from Europe and Left-wing sources, and critics accuse Netanyahu of trying to choke off funding for watchdogs. 

Meanwhile, a creeping graft probe has Netanyahu lashing out at Police Chief Roni Alsheikh over "illegal leaks" in the media.  Police are rejecting Netanyahu's remarks as "baseless attacks aimed at disrupting police work and damaging the legitimacy of rule of law".  Members of the ruling coalition chastised Netanyahu, saying "a line was crossed" and "we will not allow this".  Former PM Ehud Barack, a critic, says Netanyahu is "ready to burn the state on his way down" and accuses him of "despicable and dangerous persecution of state institutions".  Netanyahu denies any wrongdoing.