Good Morning Australia!! - Australian kids are coming home after a horrific ordeal - Istanbul deals a defeat to Erdogan - A stunningly huge anti-government protest puts pressure on an allegedly crooked PM - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs: 

The bodies of seven climbers, including Sydney resident Ruth McCance, have been recovered from close to the peak of Nanda Devi, a notoriously difficult mountain in India's Himalayan Range.  Ms. McCance's group of eight went up last month but went missing after reports of an avalanche, and they failed to check in with the base camp.  Police say the body of a woman was recovered, and McCance was the only woman in the group.  The recovery team will continue to search for the eighth body.  Although Ruth McCance was by all accounts a well-prepared and experienced climber, the disaster highlights the dangers of climbing in the Himalayas where at least 20 climbers have died this year - eleven on Mount Everest. 

The orphaned children of so-called Islamic State fighter Khaled Sharrouf are on their way to their new life in Australia.  Their Australian maternal grandmother Karen Nettleton has been fighting for half of a decade to get the children away from their father in the Syrian warzone.  Their mother Tara Nettleton died in Mosul, Iraq in 2015, and two siblings were kileld n Raqqa in 2017.  "The fact that parents put their children into harm's way by taking them into a war zone was a despicable act,'' said PM Scott Morrison, "However, children should not be punished for the crimes of their parents."  It is more than likely the two teenage girls and their younger brother, plus the toddler children of the oldest girl will need medical treatment to deal with the results of their horrific last five years in the middle of IS's gruesome, failed war and time in refugee camps.  

A major slap-back for autocratic Turkish President Recept Tayyip Erdogan and his ruling AK Party:  Opposition candidate Ekrem Imamoglu has won the Istanbul mayoral election rerun with 54 percent of the vote.  Mr. Imamoglu also won the previous election in March, but Erdogan's party didn't like the result and claimed their were "irregularities".  This time around, the conservative and pious Islamist AK party candidate conceded defeat and Erdogan grudgingly congratulated the winner.

Imagine a PM so grossly unpopular that 250,000 people march to a rally demanding he step down.  That is exactly what happened in Prague, capital of the Czech Republic in the biggest demonstration since the fall of the Soviet bloc way back when.  They're demanding that center-right Prime Minister Andrej Babis step down over allegations he hid his vast business interests to wrongly qualify for 2 Million Euros in EU small business grants.  Babis is thus far refusing to step down and claims the charges against him are a politically motivated attack on the country.  A quarter million people disagree, doubling the size of the last anti-Babis rally a few weeks ago.

Ethiopia's military chief has been shot dead in an apparent coup attempt, but the government says it is in control.  PM Abiy Ahmed says that General Seare Mekonnen was trying to stop the coup attempt when he was murdered along with another officer by his own bodyguard.  It is believed to be linked to the killing of a regional governor hours earlier.  It comes as Ethiopia has been dealing with increasing ethnic violence.

Sao Paulo holds a giant Pride Parade for the LGBTQ community and their allies, despite the homophobia stoked by far right president Jair Bolsonaro.  Kiev's Pride Parade is actually growing year by year, with 8,000 people having fun despite the handful of protesters who tried to spoil the party.