Good Morning Australia!! - Trump is asked to stop his anti-journalism rhetoric - Why go to a polar bear's home and kill it? - Natural disaster pile up in Japan - A controversial teen leaves an Israeli jail - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

At least 14 people are dead after yesterday's magnitude 6.4 earthquake on the Indonesian island of Lombok.  The Australian Consulate General in Bali told the ABC that no Australians are believed to be among those affected.  More than 160 people are injured and thousands of homes are damaged, according to local officials.  "The main focus now is evacuation and rescue.  Some of the injured are still being treated at clinics," said Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman for the country's disaster agency.

Officials in Japan are warning of mudslides after Typhoon Jongdari hit the central part of the main island of Honshu, which has already seen a lot of flooding and slides this season.  And it's coming after a heatwave killed at least 80 people and sent thousands to hospital complaining of heatstroke and illness.  At least 150,000 homes are without power.

Funerals for the victims of Greece's deadly wildfires commenced over the weekend.  The death toll has been raised to 91 lives lost, with at least 25 people still missing.

Palestinian teen Ahed Tamimi is out of jail after eight months for slapping an Israeli Self-Defence Force soldier.  The slap was caught on video and went viral - supporters of Palestinians saw her as a symbol of resistance to Israeli occupation, while many Israelis see her as a troublemaker and publicity-seeker.  The 17-year old girl told reporters her new goal was "to study law and to focus on holding the occupation accountable".

Israeli Arab politician Zouheir Bahloul quit the Israeli parliament over the very controversial new law which declares Israel to be the nation state of the Jewish people.  The 67-year old said the Knesset was "racist" and "destructive" for passing the law, which also puts Hebrew above Arabic as the official language.  Governing coalition officials deny that the law relegates Muslims, Christians, and others to second-class status. 

New York Times publisher A.G. Sulzberger urged Donald Trump to knock off his labeling of reporters as "enemies of the people", saying it could "lead to violence" against the media.  The weekend meeting between the two at the White House was supposed to have been off the record, but Trump broke the deal by tweeting about it, using the phrase "fake news" and failing to acknowledge his own references to reporters as "enemies of the people".  BTW, journalism is the one and only profession singled out for protection from government intrusion in the United States constitution.

US Defence Secretary James Mattis is denying Australian news reports that the US is preparing to attack Iran and Oz will help.  "I have no idea where the Australian news people got that information," Mattis said, "I'm confident it is not something that's being considered right now and I think it's a complete, frankly, it's fiction."  The ABC reported that senior members of the Turnbull government said the Australian military would help the US pick targets related to Iran's nuclear program for a military strike as early as next month.  It came in line with tit-for-tat jibes and threats from Washington and Tehran, and Donald Trump's upper-case tweet that basically threatened war.

An attorney who helped defend Serbian war criminal Slobodan Milosevic was gunned down outside his home in Belgrade.  Police say it's not clear if the shooting death of 57-year old Dragoslav Ognjanovic is related to the defense of Milosevic at the trial in The Hague in the early 2000s, or of his defense of several mafia figures since then.  But the local Bar Association considers it an attack on all lawyers, and they will go on strike this week.

Rights groups are denouncing Cambodia's elections as a sham.  Long-ruling Prime Minister Hun Sen will serve another five year-term after the main opposition party was dissolved and unable to run against him.

There is outrage after a cruise ship guard shot and killed a polar bear because it attacked an injured a co-worker.  The guards were escorting tourists from the MS Bremen, which is operated by the German company Hapag-Lloyd Cruises, onto an island in Norway's Svalbard archipelago, within the Arctic Circle.  The injured guard had to be airlifted to hospital in a stable condition, and the company maintains this was self-defence.  British comedian Ricky Gervais summed up the opposing view:  "'Let's get too close to a polar bear in its natural environment and then kill it if it gets too close'.  Morons."