Good Morning Australia!! - How poverty worsened a disaster in Pakistan - The experts put a dollar sign on the Great Barrier Reef's worth to Australia - Crazy video you'll be glad you're not a part of: A bumpy airline ride, an eight-meter fall from an amusement park ride, and a wayward shark visits beach-goers - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

The Great Barrier Reef is worth AU$56 Billion to Australia, in a report that for the first time calculates economic, social and iconic brand value.  Deloitte Access Economics says more than half of that value comes from tourism, followed by brand value, and then recreational use.  39,000 people are directly employed by reef-related business, while another 64,000 jobs are linked to it nationally.  The Great Barrier Reef Foundation commissioned this report at a time when the reef is threatened by bleaching cause by global warming and environmental degradation from mining and agriculture.

An AirAsia X flight had to turn back to Perth because of an engine failure that made the plane shake like a "washing machine"Passengers recorded video of the short ride on AirAsia X flight D7237, suggesting that it could have ended a lot worse.  "I could just tell by the cabin crew's reaction that it was really bad," passenger Sophie Nicolas told the ABC.  "It was essentially the engine seized up I think, that's what they told us anyway," said passenger Brenton Atkinson, It was literally like you were sitting on top of a washing machine.  The whole thing was going."

An overturned gasoline tanker burst into flames in Pakistan, horribly killing at least 125 people.  This happened outside the eastern city of Bahawalpur in Pakistan's Punjab province.  Many people had converged on the tanker to try and scoop up leaked fuel, and firefighters suspect someone might have been smoking.  "The poverty level here rises up to 65 percent at times," said Pakistani journalists Sabir Shah of GEO TV to Al Jazeera, "In these conditions, with these figures, how can you expect people not to collect cooking fuel for themselves?  This petrol is being used as cooking fuel by many people in nearby fields."  Dozens of people were rushed to local hospitals which lack burn units to properly treat them.

Guatemala has charged two police officers and three government officials over the fire at a girls' shelter that killed 41 people in March.  Officials at the government-run Virgen de la Asuncion shelter locked girls in their dorms to end a protest over sex abuse and overcrowding; one of the girls apparently set a mattress on fire in response.  The charges range from sex abuse to manslaughter to negligence.

Hopes are fading for the 93 people still missing underneath the massive landslide in Xinmo, China.  Thousands of rescuers with detection devices and sniffer dogs worked the site on Sunday, but only ten bodies were recovered.

Turkish police stopped LGBT activists from holding a banned Pride Parade in Istanbul (cops did the same thing last year).  At least ten people were detained as cops confiscated rainbow flags and briefly fired rubber bullets, tear gas, and water hoses to disperse the marchers.  Officially, the parade was banned because of threats from right-wing groups, but Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been putting his personal Islamist stamp on more and more areas of Turkish secular life.

Erdogan is rejecting the Saudi Arabian demand to pull Turkish troops out of Qatar, calling it "disrespectful".  The Saudis and its bloc made this and other demands of Qatar in exchange for ending their economic and diplomatic blockade of their Persian Gulf neighbor.  But even US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is admitting that meeting these demands - which include shutting down the Al Jazeera news network - would be difficult to achieve even if Qatar were so inclined.  He's suggesting, "A lowering of rhetoric would also help ease the tension."

The federal government is facing increasing pressure to extradite a Chilean accused of taking part in kidnapping, torture, and murder under the fascist dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet.  Chile considers Adriana Rivas to be a fugitive; the former Pinochet secret police agent has been living in Sydney and working as a nanny.  "We don't want Australia to be seen as a country that harbours people who commit human rights abuses," said Pilar Aguilera of the National Campaign for Truth and Justice in Chile to Fairfax Media.  "There are hundreds of Chilean-Australians who arrived here fleeing the dictatorship and there would be hundreds of relatives of people who were disappeared by the dictatorship."

A forest fire in southern Spain forced the evacuation of more than 2,000 people and is threatening the Donana National Park, an important tourist attraction and a UNESCO World Heritage site that is a crucial stopover point for birds migrating between Africa and Europe.  Fighting the fire was proving difficult because of the hot, dry weather, with temperatures reaching 39 C degrees Celsius, as well as shifting winds.

People on holiday in Majorca, Spain were forced to run from the water as a Blue Shark swam by the beach at Magaluf.  One woman had to be rescued because the 1.5 meter fish got between her and the shore.  Blue Sharks usually live in deeper waters, and a necropsy suggested that it might have been disoriented from a fish hook caught in its mouth sometime before frightening the tourists.

A teenage girl amazingly escaped serious injury after falling almost eight meters from an amusement park ride in upstate New York.  The girl is seen dangling from a gondola at Six Flags Great Escape in Lake George, as people gathered below to catch her.  And catch her they did.  The frightened 14-year old was treated at the park and rushed to hospital where doctors said she is in a stable condition with no serious injuries.