Good Morning Australia! - Belgium arrests a man in connection with the Paris terrorist attacks - French cops investigate a suicide belt found in the trash in Paris - China gets absolutely gruesome in dealing with terrorists - If you can't access your email, we might know "why" - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Belgium's Prime Minister says the state of emergency in the capital Brussels will remain for at least another day, but schools and the Metro might reopen on Wednesday.  Soldiers are in strategic positions around the city, and large gatherings are still banned.  Prosecutors charged a fourth man with terrorism offenses related to the 13 November terrorist attacks that killed 130 people in Paris.  That man was one of 16 arrested in Sunday's sweeps; the others were let go.  Paris fugitive Salah Abdeslam has thus far eluded police.

French road crews found an apparent explosive suicide belt discarded in the trash in Montrouge, a southern suburb of Paris.  The area is cordoned off, and sources indicate the device could be packed with nuts and bolts, which suicide bombers use to create shrapnel - but lacked a detonator.  This discovery is located very close to the spot where authorities found the mobile phone of Salah Abdeslam.  Two men arrested last week have confessed to driving Abdeslam from Paris to Belgium, and said that he was wearing an explosive belt when they picked him up.

UK Prime Minister David Cameron visited Paris, where he toured the sites of the 13 November attacks with President Francois Hollande. 

Chinese soldiers busted out flamethrowers on a nest of alleged terrorists in restive Xinjiang province.  This followed an attack on a mine in September in which 16 people died.  The People's Liberation Army Daily said commanders ordered flamethrowers to flush out militants hiding in a cave, who were then shot.  Separatists from the Uighur Muslim minority in the northwestern province have staged several terrorist attacks across China

The Dominican Republic issued four arrest warrants for or three French citizens accused of helping two French pilots flee drug convictions.  One of the three is Aymeric Chauprade, an independent right-wing member of the European parliament.  The two pilots were sentenced to 20 years each for attempting to fly 26 suitcases filled with cocaine out of the country, and they fled the DR while appealing the case.  Both were arrested in Lyon last month, but it is doubtful that France will extradite them back to the Caribbean to face justice.

Yahoo is preventing email users from accessing their accounts unless they disable ad-blocking software on their browsers.  The company claims it is trying a "new product experience".  Last year, Yahoo admitted that its homepage was infected with malware for a period of four days.  Ad-blocking software doesn't block online annoyances (except for those thing on the left and right which are wonderfully enriching your CareerSpot experience and I like to be paid so don't turn them off please), but also block tracking software and increase battery life on mobiles. 

A new report confirms that the slow international response to the West African Ebola Epidemic "needless suffering and death".  The report is published in The Lancet.  In it, a panel of experts convened by The Harvard Global Health Institute and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine say that Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone - the countries worst hit by the crisis - had no infrastructure to handle a highly infectious killer virus.  But the scathing criticism was reserved for the UN World Health Organization for waiting for five month to declare an international health emergency, and developed nations for sending too little aid in the first months.  More than 11,300 people died of Ebola disease, mostly in the three African nations.

601 Babies took part in a  crawling contest in Yokohama outside Tokyo, Japan.