Good Morning Australia!! - Turkey is very quickly regressing into a terrible place, and the West is urging caution - Russia could be banned from the Summer Olympics over doping - A minute of silence is pierced by angry booing - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Russia could be banned from the 2016 Summer Olympic games in Rio de Janeiro after a damning report from the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).  It said that Moscow "directed, controlled and oversaw" the manipulation of urine samples provided by its athletes - basically throwing out the ones that were chock full o' steroids and other banned performance enhancing substances.  The International Olympic Committee (IOC) described the commission's findings as a "shocking and unprecedented attack on the integrity of sport and on the Olympic Games" and is due to announce a decision on Russia's participation later on Tuesday.

A man with an axe attacked and wounded at least 21 people on a train in Wurzburg in southern Germany.  Local media is reprting the suspect has been shot by police.

French Prime Minister Manuel Valls was booed during the minute of silence at a memorial for the 84 people killed in last week's truck attack in Nice, France,  Whether it was right-wing instigators or a genuine reaction from a troubled crowd, Mr. Valls was subjected to taunts of "traitor" and "murderer" as the government is criticized for not knowing about the suspect in the attack.  Meanwhile, authorities are still insisting that the driver of the truck that plowed into the crowd at the Bastille Day fireworks display, 31-year old Mohamed Lahouaiej-Bouhlel, was radicalized to jihadism only recently - but still cannot present any pledge to foreign groups or statement of his intent or reasoning.  Bouhlel was killed in a gun battle with French police after the truck stopped.

The man identified as the killer of three police officers in Baton Rouge, Louisiana on Sunday apparently left a series of videos on social media detailing his disgust with police treatment of African-Americans.  29-year old ex-marine Gavin Long stressed he is not affiliated with any group, but claimed to be affiliated with "justice" - and urged Black Americans to fight back agaisnt police.  Police say he killed the three officers on Sunday morning and was shot and killed by other cops.

It's starting to look like not one police officer will answer for the murder of Freddie Gray in Baltimore, Maryland last year.  The highest ranking of six cops to be charged was acquitted by the judge who released three other accused cops.  Another sham trial will commence next week.  Freddie Gray was arrested and beaten down by cops last year for allegedly possessing a switchblade.  Video showed the assailing officers dragging his broken body - with one leg unnaturally twisted - into a police van, in which he was given a "rough ride", sliding around on the floor as the cop drove like maniacs with lots of turns and sudden stops.  Gray's head was severed from his neck internally, and he died of decapitation after lingering in hospital for a few days.  The brutality of the murder set off riots in the US east coast city.

There is outrage in India after the gang rape and attempted murder of a 21-year old woman by the same five suspects who attacked her three years ago.  And despite a week passing since the latest crie, police have yet to act.  The woman was pursuing a case against the men for the first attack when they located her in Rohtak town in the northern state of Haryana.  It's been four years since the rape and killing of a physiotherapy student on a bus in Delhi - and the Indian cops haven't learned a damned thing.

South African rally driver and popular television presenter Gugu Zulu has died on Mount Kilamanjaro.  The 39-year old and his wife were taking part in a climb for a charity affiliated with the late Nelson Mandela.  Mr. Zulu complained of flu-like symptoms on his social media account and was said to have experienced breathing problems on the mountain.

And now, the aftermath of the coup attempt in Turkey:

Turkey appeared to have ready-made lists of enemies of the state to be arrested in the hours after last weekend's failed coup d'etat.  Thousands of civilians have been arrested, while judges and prosecutors were dismissed en masse - and on Monday, the government fired 9,000 police officers.  All this, for a coup involving a few thousand troops, not all of whom appeared to be on the same page:  "It looks at least as if something has been prepared.  The lists are available, which indicates it was prepared and to be used at a certain stage," said European Commissioner Johannes Hahn, who is overseeing Turkey's European Union membership bid.  "I'm very concerned.  It is exactly what we feared." 

The EU is warning Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan that bringing back the death penalty to execute the alleged coup plotters will end Turkey's bid to join the European Union, according to according to EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini.  But Erdogan on Monday refused to rule it out:  "'Why should I keep them and feed them in prisons, for years to come?' - that's what the people say."  Over the weekend, Erdogan declared that the alleged coup plotters "will pay a heavy price for this act of treason".  Secular Turkey eliminated capital punishment in 2004, and hadn't actually executed any prisoners since 1984 - but now, Erdogan says he'll sign a capital punishment bull if parliament passes it.

The Turkish's heavy-handed response to the alleged coup is alarming Washington as well as Europe.  US Secretary of State John Kerry is cautioning Erdogan that Turkey could be kicked out of NATO, whose members are required to "uphold democracy, including tolerating diversity".  Kerry said the US stands with the democratically-elected government, but urges Erdogan's Turkey "to uphold the highest standards of respect for the nation's democratic institutions and the rule of law". 

There are new doubts about the so-called "confession" of a Turkish Air Force General after he was arrested in the chaotic aftermath of Friday night's violence:  The state-run Anadolu news agency quoted General Akin Ozturk as telling interrogators he had "acted with intention to stage a coup".  But private broadcasters say he made no such confession and played no role.  Ozturk has been paraded on TV, out of uniform and wearing a dirty, thread-bare polo shirt that frankly looked like it was rejected from a Goodwill donation center.  Other troops have been photographed stripped down to their underwear and herded into warehouses of hangars.

The Deputy Mayor of Istanbul is in a critical condition after being shot in the head in Turkey's post-coup chaos.  A gunman reportedly burst into Cemil Candas's office and opened fire.  Mr. Candas had two strikes against him in a Turkey that many fear will tip into Islamism:  He is Jewish, and he's a member of the main opposition party, the Republican People's Party.  All opposition parties have condemned the attempted coup.