Good Morning Australia!! - Horror in Guatemala at a home for abused teens - The estranged Kim family introduces a new North Korean rebel group - The UN apparently isn't going to back up its own Human Rights report - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

There were serious problems at the Guatemalan children's home where at least 19 people were found dead in a fire.  Authorities had been monitoring the Virgin of the Assumption Safe Home after reports of overcrowding, suspected abuse, and escapes.  Built to house 500 children who are homeless, abused at home, or with nowhere to go after serving in youth detention, officials say there were at least 800 there at the time of the fire, which started when some residents started setting fire to mattresses in the shelter.  Most or all of the dead and injured appear to been teenage girls.

The apparent son of Kim Jong-nam appeared on a YouTube video in the first statement from the Kim family about the assassination of the estranged brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un.  "My name is Kim Han-sol, from North Korea, part of the Kim family.  My father has been killed a few days ago.  I'm currently with my mother and my sister," the nephew of Kim Jong-un said in English.  After identifying himself, he said he and family members had been "extracted" to safety by a previously unknown group called Cheollima Civil Defense.  The group says it received help from the South Korean, Chinese, US, and Dutch government.  Han-sol's father Jong-nam after being exposed to the deadly nerve agent VX at the Kuala Lumpur airport nearly a month ago.  Han-sol makes no political message, but ended the video with, "We hope this gets better soon."

Gunmen with the so-called Islamic state dressed as doctors attacked the largest military hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan, killing at least 38 people.  Government commandos dropped on the roof of the Sardar Daud hospital managed to get in an kill all four attackers.

Myanmar's abysmal treatment of the Rohingya Muslim minority will apparently escape a full investigation by the United Nations Human Rights Council. The panel's current session expires later this month, and the European Union - which usually spearheads Myanmar issues - has failed to call for a detailed investigation.  A draft resolution going around suggests the panel will not call for the high-level probe sought by UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein.  Last month, the UN issued a report accusing the Myanmar military of mass killings and gang rapes of Rohingya Muslims in northern Rakhine state, and of burning villages in a campaign that may amount to crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing.

Just to be jerks, Israel's Parliament gave preliminary approval to a pair of bills that restrict Mosques from using loudspeakers to issue the call to prayer, which didn't seem to be a problem for decades prior to this week.  One version of the "muezzin bill" would ban all places of worship from using loudspeakers between 23:00 and 07:00.  The other nebulously bans the use of speakers considered "unreasonably loud and likely to cause disturbance" at any time of day.  "The voice of a muezzin has never caused any environmental noise," protested Arab Israeli lawmaker Ahmed Tibi, "Your action is a racist slur."