Good Morning Australia! - The Iran Nuclear Deal overcomes a major hurdle - The photo that sums up the European refugee crisis - Rescuers finally get to animals trapped in cages as flood waters rose around them - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

US President Barack Obama has gained enough support in the Senate to ensure approval of the Iran Nuclear Deal.  "I have concluded that this Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action is the best option available to block Iran from having a nuclear bomb," said Democratic Senator Barbara Mikulski of Maryland in announcing her support.  It means that congressional republicans and Israel's conservative government are not going to be able to block the agreement reached by the US, UK, France, Germany, Russia, China, and Iran.  The deal rolls back international financial sanctions on Iran in exchange for Tehran curbing its nuclear program.

Italy, France, and Germany signed a joint document on immigration, and called for the 'fair' distribution of refugees across the European Union.  It calls for a review of current European Union rules on granting asylum and underlines that the current migrant crisis has "clearly shown the limits and defects" of existing rules and a need for them to be re-assessed.

Hungary's right-wing Prime Minister Viktor Orban will meet with EU chiefs on Thursday to discuss his country's handling of the refugee crisis.  Hungary has stopped thousands of refugees at Budapest's main train station from traveling on to other European countries.  People of European appearance are not being stopped nor asked for their papers.  The refugees, a couple of thousand strong, are now camped around the station - even though they never wanted to stay in Hungary in the first place.  Hungary tends to deny most asylum claims, which is not something that people want to hear after trekking through five or six countries.

At least twelve Syrian refugees drowned when their boat capsized off of Greece, and one photo from the tragedy is sparking an outcry.  It shows a Syrian boy, face down on the beach after his body washed ashore (note disturbing content).  He's one of five children to have drowned in that specific incident, but among thousands who drowned in the sea.  But there are hopes that actually seeing what this crisis looks like, rather than focusing on faceless crowds near some train tracks, might impress the seriousness of this situation.

Paris police arrested a man after a fire that killed eight people including two children.  This happened in the 18th Arrondissement near Montmartre.  Firefighters were called to the address twice - once for a small fire of some newspapers, and again hours alter for the deadliest residential fire in the French capital in a decade.  Investigators say they were already familiar with the man they arrested.

Thai police say the fingerprints of a man detained trying to cross into Cambodia match those found on bomb-making found in Bangkok.  They believe the man is involved in a network responsible for the Erawan Shrine bombing, which killed 20 people.  He's also been linked to a passport that shows he had come from China Xinjiang province, home of the ethnic Uighur separatist movement.

A twin suicide bombing at a Shiite mosque in Yemen has killed at least 20 people.

Russian rescuers have begun to evacuate zoo animals from a flood zone north of Vladivostok in the far east of the country.  So far, they've been able to airlift three bears and a lion - all stressed and malnourished after being trapped in cages as the remnants of Typhoon Goni caused flooding all around them.

Further north off Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula, a pod of Orcas swam around doing Orca stuff.

A US judge refused to drop charges against six Baltimore, Maryland police officers implicated in the death of Freddie Gray, the African American man who died of a severe spinal cord injury while in police custody in April.  The death set off days of violent unrest in Baltimore, just a few kilometers from the nation's capital Washington, DC.  The cops face charges ranging from second degree murder to assault.