Good Morning Australia!! - Turkey raises the death toll in the Istanbul Airport attack - The UK is awash in post-Brexit hate crimes - EgyptAir Flight MS804's black boxes are beginning to yield clues - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Turkey has declared a day of mourning as the first funerals take place for the 41 people killed in the terrorist attack at Istanbul's Ataturk Airport.  President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is blaming Islamic State for the late-night attack on one of the world's biggest transportation hubs.  At least three terrorists with guns and suicide vests burst into the international terminal's arrivals and departures areas; they sprayed people with bullets and then detonated their explosives.  The rampage lasted only a few minutes but killed dozens of people and injured more than 250.

The attack pretty much gutted Turkey's tourism sector instantly, with some companies reporting that travelers are rapidly cancelling plans for the Muslim Eid holiday; booking are down to 30 percent normal.  To that end, President Erdogan placed a contrite phone call to Russian President Vladimir Putin - the first time they spoke since Turkey downed a Russian fighter jet on the Syrian border earlier this year.  Putin announced that economic sanctions against Ankara would be lifted, starting "with the question of tourism".  Turkey already began working to improve relations with Israel, which had been icy in recent years, but it's not like people are going to be flocking to see the sights in Istanbul after this.

A strong challenger is emerging to UK Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn, who lost the backing of his own deputy and most of the party's MPs for failing to rally voters to "Remain" in the European Union in last week's Brexit vote.  A close ally of former shadow shadow business secretary Angela Eagle says she has numbers to oust Corbyn in Thursday's meeting.  Corbyn refuses to stand down after his failures on the Brexit and no-confidence measures, claiming he still has a mandate for the party members who elected him.  The UK's big ten unions are still backing Corbyn as well.  But the Corbyn-ites have proven to be lacking a plan for connecting with the voters who've abandoned them in several consecutive elections.  And Corbyn's MPs refused to defend him when outgoing British PM David Cameron taunted Corbyn, "For heaven's sake man, go!" - from the dispatch box of Parliament.

Hate crimes are on the rise in the UK, as racists and other ignorant nobs interpret the narrow results of the Brexit vote as a license to attack people perceived as "foreign".  The police hate-crime-reporting website True Vision reports a 57 percent increase in hate crimes from between Thursday and Sunday, compared with the same period last month.  The number may actually be greater, because many such crimes are reported directly to police stations and community groups.  Stop Hate UK also saw an increase, and the anti-Islamophobia website Tell Mama got 75 percent of its usual monthly total in just three days after the referendum. 

One incident getting worldwide attention involved three teenage wankers racially abusing and threatening a US Army veteran aboard a tram in Manchester.  Juan Jasso, a sports lecturer at Manchester Metropolitan University, told the brats to stop cussing; they responded by bringing up the referendum, and telling him to "go back to Africa" among other things.  Other passengers rolled video and told the brats that they're a "disgrace to England".  Police arrested the trio, and Mr. Jasso has received support from all over the world.

A British Billionaire who donated millions to the "Leave" campaign wound up losing 400 Million Pounds Sterling in the global reaction to the looming Brexit.  Peter Hargreaves of Hargreaves Lansdown, one of the United Kingdom's largest financial services businesses, says he has no regrets because he insists that leaving the European Union would be good for his country.  Yeah, it's working out just great.

Moving Along...

The first data gleaned from the flight recorders off of EgyptAir Flight MS804 confirms smoke inside the cabin in the moments before the Airbus A320 plunged into the Mediterranean Sea on 19 May, killing all 66 people on board.  Avionics data transmitted by the ill-fated plane as it flew showed smoke in a lavatory and below the flight deck. 

Toyota is recalling 1.43 million vehicles worldwide, over faulty airbags.  The cars affected are Prius and Lexus models from 2008 to 2012.  These bags were not manufactured by the Takata company, which has been at the root of recalls for automakers all over the world.

Police in India are investigating two constables who claimed to have climbed Mount Everest.  Skeptics note that photos show Dinesh and Tarakeshwari Rathod wearing different sets of clothes at different points to the climb - there are no wardrobe changes on Everest.  Others claim the pics appear to have been photoshopped.  Others say they couldn't have made it to the top of the world's highest mountain on the date they claim, which is too soon after the last time they were confirmed to be in base camp.  Mr. and Mrs. Rathod, from the western Indian city of Pune, insist they are telling the truth.