Good Morning Australia!! - A struggle at the top of the world to recover the body of a Melbourne woman - A singing star is in a critical condition after a crazed fan attacks - Afghanistan says a drone attack hit its mark - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

The Australian woman who died after summitting Mount Everest has been identified as 34-year old Dr. Maria "Marisa" Strydom, a lecturer at Monash University in Melbourne.  "Maria was a valued and popular member of the department of banking and finance at Monash University," her colleague Philip Gray told the ABC.  Her veterinarian husband Robert Gropel is struggling down the mountain with congestive heart failure.  Recovery Dr. Strydom from close to the top of the world's highest peak will take some effort - it normally takes eight people to bring down a body because it becomes heavier once it freezes.  And in addition to Dr. Strydom, a Dutch man also succumbed to altitude sickness on the way back down from the summit.

Nepal officials say there are around 30 climbers have developed frostbite or become sick near the summit of Mount Everest.  Many have frostbite, altitude sickness, or snow blindness.  One woman who suffered severe frostbite on her feet and hands required several Sherpa guides to carry her from Camp Four near the top to Camp Two further down, where a helicopter could take her to hospital in Katmandu.  The climbing seasons were called off in 2014 and 2015 because of an avalanche and earthquakes, respectively; but favorable weather this year has allowed nearly 400 climbers to reach the summit since 11 May. 

Japanese pop idol Mayu Tomita is in a critical condition and still unconscious after being stabbed almost two dozen times by a deranged fan.  This happened before a gig in the western suburbs of Tokyo over the weekend.  When police arrived at the scene, they found a trail of blood, a bloody folding knife with an 8.2 centimeter blade, and 27-year old Tomohiro Iwazaki standing nearby.  He reportedly confessed to stabbing Ms. Tomita because she spurned his advances.  Records showed that Tomita complained to police last month about being stalked by Iwazaki.  A year ago, a crazed man with a saw attacked and seriously wounded members of pop idol group AKB48 at a meet and greet event.

The de facto leader of Myanmar Aung San Suu Kyi is asking for "enough space" from the international community to deal with her country's beleaguered and abused Rohingya Muslim minority.  This comes after US Secretary of State John Kerry called on her government to "promote respect for human rights and benefit all" during a visit to the capital Naypyidaw.  Nobel peace prize laureate Suu Kyi has been largely silent and distant on the issue of the Rohingya, who live in apartheid-like conditions in the northwest and are not even considered to be citizens by the government, even though most have lived in Myanmar for several generations.  Last week, Ms. Suu Kyi asked the US Ambassador to refrain from using the term "Rohingya".

Afghanistan's spy agency is confirming that Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansour was killed in a US drone strike over the weekend.  US Secretary of State John Kerry justified it, saying that said Mansour had posed "a continuing, imminent threat to US personnel".  The actual strike took place over the border in Pakistan's Baluchistan region, and Pakistan complained it was a "violation of its sovereignty" (although it didn't complain too much).

Iraq is warning civilians to flee as it prepares to retake Falluja after almost two and a half years of control by the terrorists of Islamic State.  The city is one of IS's last strongholds.  The military is instructing those who are not able to flee to raise a white flag above their homes.

Turkey's new Prime Minister Binali Yildirim is calling for a new constitution to enshrine more powers in the office of the president, meaning that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (who once had his balls kicked by a horse) chose his latest arse-kisser well.  Erdogan's ruling AK Party confirmed Yildirim to replace Ahmet Davutoglu, who quit as prime minister over Erdogan's rapid consolidation of power.

An Egyptian military submarine has joined the search for the black box flight recorders off of EgyptAir Flight MS804, which crashed into the Mediterranean Sea last week.  But early guesses of terrorism as the cause of the disaster that killed 66 people are being put on the back burner.  "There is no particular theory we can affirm right now," said Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi, "This could take a long time but no one can hide these things.  As soon as the results are out people will be informed."

Prosecutors in Peru are investigating far-right presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori for alleged money-laundering.  The probe actually started weeks ago, but is just coming into light now - two weeks before the presidential election.  She's in a tight race against former World Bank economist Pedro Kuczynski.  Her lousy father is serving a 25-year prison sentence for killings, human rights abuses, and corruption during his rule in the 1990s.

Austria's presidential election over the weekend is a real nail-biter.  Both candidates have about 50 percent of the vote:  But independent Alexander Van der Bellen, a 72-year-old Green who favors accepting more refugees, is a few thousand votes ahead of fascist Norbert Hofer of the anti-immigrant, anti-European Union "Freedom" Party.  The balance could well be tipped by the counting of mail-in ballots.