Good Morning Australia! - The Global Climate Conference brings world leaders to Paris - Russia accuses Turkey of doing business with Islamic State - A grim discovery in Mexico might reveal the fate of two missing Aussies - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

The COP21 conference in Paris is supposed to bring the leaders of 150 nations together to discuss a solution to the problem of global warming which is caused by man-made air pollution.  Everyone is talking about the problems:  Rising temperatures will make some parts of the world uninhabitable, causing mass migrations that will threaten the security of other nations; melting polar ice caps will raise sea levels, threatening low-lying coastal areas and more migrations; higher temperatures means more water evaporation into the air which creates wilder weather.  Oh, and all of this is already happening around the world in varying degrees.

"Australia is not daunted by the challenge" of battling global warming, according to Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull speaking to other world leaders in Paris.  he says Oz will commit A$1 Billion over the next five years to the effort, especially the island nations close to Australia:  "Some of the most vulnerable nations are our neighbors and we are helping them to build resilience," said Mr. Turnbull.  US President Barack Obama said, "The United States of America not only recognizes our role in creating this problem, we embrace our responsibility to do something about it."

But other agendas are also being worked at the Paris summit.  Russia President Vladimir Putin bluntly accused Turkey of shooting down a SU-24 fighter jet to protect its illegal oil trade with Islamic State, and he calls it "a big mistake".  The allegations of Turkey allowing the terrorist group to run black market oil actually go back several months before the downing of the Sukhoi, but Russia's state-controlled media has been pushing the story since the pilot and a Russian Marine rescuer were killed.  Putin was asked on the sidelines of the COP21 meeting if Russia could join a larger international coalition to fight Islamic State, but he said it "cannot be done while someone continues to use several terrorist organizations to reach their immediate goals".

Hours after Turkey struck a deal with the European Union to shut off the flow of refugees and migrants, Turkey began rounding up some 1,300 migrants apparently on their way to Greece to claim asylum in the EU.  Amnesty International said in a statement that the move is as "illegal as it is unconscionable", and calls it "a stain on the EU's conscience too".  The detainees are men,women, and children; they are reportedly from Syria, Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan.  Some suspected smugglers were also arrested.  The EU will pay Turkey 3 Billion Euros to clamp down on migrants using it as a transit point into Europe, as well as speed up Turkey's application to join the European Union.  

Mexican authorities confirm a  burned out van with two bodies in it was registered to a pair of missing surfers from West Australia.  Dean Lucas and Adam Coleman, both 33, were traveling on North America's west coast when they went missing on 20 November.  The van was discovered in Sinaloa state, a drug and crime plagued area of a drug and crime plagued country.  Relatives from Australia are on their way to Mexico to provide DNA and dental records to help identify the two bodies.

A Russian member of parliament was killed when an explosive went off in her car - while she was semi-naked with her husband in the vehicle.  30-year-old Oksana Bobrovskaya was a member of Vladimir Putin's United Russia Party in Novosibirsk, Siberia's biggest city, and known for her glamour photos on social media.  There are two theories in the deaths:  She was either in flagrante delicto with her husband, Nikita, a former member of Russia’s special services, when the explosion occurred; another version suggests the two were having marital trouble and the husband detonated a hand grenade.  Novosibirsk Mayor Anatoly Lokot said flatly, "This was not a terrorist act."