Good Morning Australia!! - Is a Brexit rebellion brewing? - Greek cops battle angry nationalists - A 97-year old who just wrecked his car is driving again - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

A cross-party group of British lawmakers reportedly will attempt to wrest control of the Brexit process from Prime Minister Theresa May, according to CNN.  Led by Conservative Nick Boles and Labour's Yvette Cooper and Hilary Benn, they will introduce a measure to suspend the UK's invocation of EU Charter Article 50, which would have the UK leave the EU by 29 March.  It would also block "crashing" out of the EU without a comprehensive series of treaties and trade agreements designed to avoid the economic chaos that could ensue.  Number Ten, of course, is against this:  "Any attempt to remove the government's power to meet the legal conditions of an orderly exit at this moment of historic significance is extremely concerning," said a May spokesperson, "The British public voted to leave the European Union and it is vital that elected politicians deliver upon that verdict."

Police in the Greek capital Athens battled thousands of nationalist protesters upset over the government's plans to recognize of Macedonia's name to North Macedonia.  The nationalists believe that the name Macedonia should be reserved only for Greece's northern province, and that was where the vast majority of protesters came from in a coordinated convoy of buses.  And when 60,000 to 100,000 angry people show up in one place, chances are some of them brought Molotovs and rocks - which the police answered with water cannons and tear gas.  Parliament will debate it starting Monday, and approval could come by Friday.  North Macedonia already approved the deal, which would end a three decade dispute.

Two people were killed when fire swept through seasonal worker housing in the French ski resort of Courchevel, and at least 22 people were injured.  "Because the fire was on the third floor, some people jumped to save their lives," said a local government official, Frederic Loiseau.  "There were carbon monoxide emissions, and there were burns."  Investigators are determining the cause.

The death toll from the fuel pipe explosion in Mexico has risen to 79 lives lost; dozens are injured and several charred bodis remain at the scene.  Fuel thieves drilled through the Pemex pipeline at Tlahuelilpan, in Hidalgo state, creating a huge gasoline spout.  Authorities say around 800 people were able to fill up cans and containers before the thing exploded.  Despite Mexico's abundance of oil, the distribution system is decrepit and the state oil company corrupt; local fuel stations have run dry, and a few liters of fuel are worth more than the daily minimum wage on the black market.

Instead of hiding the car keys from 97-year old Prince Philip, a new Range Rover was delivered to him and he has taken to the roads around Sandringham Estate - two days after he rolled his previous SUV, hitting another car and slightly injuring two people in the process.  Sunday's newspapers were plastered with images of the Duke of Edinburgh driving - without wearing a seat belt.

The world's oldest man is dead at age 113 years, 179 days.  His family says Masazo Nonaka died in his sleep early Sunday at home in Ashoro on Japan's northern main island of Hokkaido.  The Guinness World Record people will set about to determine who inherits the title; it could go to 113-year old Gustav Gerneth of Germany, who is about 80 days younger than the late Nonaka-san.  For the world's oldest person, we have to go back to Japan:  116-year old Kane Tanaka lives in Fukuoka.