Good Morning Australia!! - Singer Delores O'Riordan dies suddenly in London - Venezuela takes down a grande-throwing fugitive group - The worker who sent Hawaii into a panic gets a new job - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

The lead singer of The Cranberries Dolores O'Riordan has died suddenly in London at the age of 46.  Her publicist said that family members are "devastated to hear the breaking news" and have requested privacy "at this very difficult time".  Details of the tragedy are vague:  She was in London reportedly to do some recording; emergency services were summoned to her room at the London Hilton on Park Lane where she was pronounced.  Ms. O'Riordan's 20-year marriage came to an end in 2014, the same year as her air rage row in which she head-butted a cop, and over the years she dealt with dealt with bi-polar disorder.  She leaves behind three children, Taylor Baxter, Molly Leigh, and Dakota Rain.

Formed in Limerick, Ireland in 1989, Delores O'Riordan and The Cranberries scored a number of hit across the 1990s beginning with "Dreams" which became the soundtrack to a long-running series of international advertisements for Irish Tourism.  Other hits included "Linger", "Zombie", "Ode to My Family", "Salvation", "When You're Gone", and "Tomorrow" among many others.  They eventually sold more than 40 million albums.  President Michael D. Higgins paid tribute to Ms. O'Riordan, saying she and The Cranberries had an "immense influence on rock and pop music in Ireland and internationally".

Indonesia authorities say 72 people were hurt in yesterday's walkway collapse at the Indonesia Stock Exchange building in Jakarta.  The moment the walkway collapse was caught on video, showing dozens of hijab-clad office workers and visiting students waiting for an elevator and spilling to the hard floor several meters below along with shards of shattered glass and debris.  Some of the witnesses report feeling some form of vibration just before it happened.

Toronto, Canada police say a reported scissors attack on an eleven-year old girl in a hijab "did not happen".  Word of the alleged attack on Friday set out outrage across Canada, and even Prime Minister Justin Trudeau condemned it along with Toronto and Ontario officials.  Police stressed it's "quite rare" for someone to make false allegations of this type, and given the girl is only eleven-years old (and probably doesn't understand the level of trouble she stirred up), she will not be charged.

The Hawaii civil defense worker who accidentally plunged the island chain into a panic by sending out a false warning of an impending intercontinental ballistic missile attack has been reassigned.  For almost 40 minutes on Saturday, Hawaiians who were convinced they were about to be incinerated made mad dashes for shelters, some going as far as to kiss their kids goodbye as they stuffed them down storm drains for some level of protection from that which was not going to happen.  Hawaii and much of the western US is on edge as the lying, racist, ignorant orange clown Donald Trump taunts North Korean leader Kim Jong-un who is rapidly developing nuclear weapons and the missiles via which to deliver them.

Glowing red lava flows forced thousands to evacuate from around the Mayon Volcano in the Philippines.

Two police officers and several "terrorists" were killed in a Venezuelan special forces operation to capture the ex-cop who commandeered a helicopter and dropped hand grenades on government buildings in Caracas on 27 June of last year.  The fate of Oscar Perez is not clear, but five people were arrest in the raid on a house in the town of El Junquito, near the capital.  The publicity-seeking Perez had previously released a bunch of photos of himself striking really intense poses while doing James Bond-style crap like SCUBA diving and target shooting over his shoulder using a make-up mirror.  Ooooooh.  Whatever, Annie Oakley.  Like most right-wing grandstanders in Venezuela, Perez misread the public mood and utterly failed to inspire an uprising against the Socialist government.

The so-called Islamic State is suspected in a particularly awful suicide bombing that killed 35 workers who were gathered in a Baghdad park seeking day labor gigs.  Another 90 people were wounded.  IS has pretty much lost all of its territory, and is now lashing out in murderous mayhem against day laborers trying to feed their families.

IS's Nigerian ally Boko Haram released a video purporting to show some of the remaining Chibok School girls it still holds, and the children born to them - apparently fathered by Boko Haram terrorists.  More than half of the girls kidnapped in teh 2014 mass abduction have been returned to their families.  Although the Nigerian military has worked with a regional coalition to pretty much beat the group out of the territory it once controlled, stamping it out completely has proven more difficult, and the group's leader continues to evade capture.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is stepping up his criticism of a US plan to train 30,000 Syrian rebels to handle "border crossings" in territory captured from the Syrian government.  The Turkish autocrat is vowing to "suffocate" what he cals a "terrorist army".  Turkey's objection is that much of that territory is on its border, and many of the 30,000 will be members of the Kurdish YPG - the most-effective fighting force agaisnt Islamic State but also considered by Ankara to be an extension of banned Kurdish separatist groups in Turkey.