Good Morning Australia!! - Abortion rights are pushed to the forefront in Poland - France dismantles "The Jungle" - What did the Pope say to Venezuela's embattled President during their private meeting? - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

It was another Black Monday in Warsaw and other Polish cities as protesters slammed the government's second drive to try and end women's reproductive rights.  The previous attempt ended earlier this month when women staged a one-day strike, shutting down the Polish economy.  Many in the crowd blamed the Roman Catholic church for pressuring the ultra-conservative RWNJ government for reviving the plan.

French Authorities say they are satisfied with the first day of shutting down "The Jungle" shantytown near the port of Calais.  More that 2,000 migrants from the Middle, Africa, and South Asia have been moved to refugee centers in other parts of France.  Some 7,000 people were camped out in their make-shift tents and shacks, waiting for the opportunity to hitch rides aboard lorries crossing the Channel Tunnel to the UK where the English-speaking refugees wanted to seek asylum - that dream appears to be over.

Belgium's Prime Minister is blocking a key European trade deal with Canada.  The other 27 EU governments want the deal, but Prime Minister Charles Michel is balking because of objections led by Belgium's predominantly Francophone Wallonia region.  The staunchly Socialist voters there oppose the free trade deal unless there are greater protections written in for labor, environmental and consumer standards.

A private plane chartered by France's defense ministry crashed at the airport in Malta, killing five people.  The aircraft plummeted into the ground nose-first and exploded in a ball of flames shortly after taking off for an undisclosed surveillance mission.  Maltese Prime minister Charles Muscat insists the mysterious aircraft had been operating with his government's permission.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) is demanding an investigation into the bombing of a Shiite Mosque in northern Iraq on Friday that killed at least 13 women and children.  Witnesses say it had to have been an air strike because of the scale of the destruction, and the sound of jets.  "Iraqi forces should investigate whether this was a possible unlawful airstrike that killed civilians and report their findings. If this turns out to be their fault, they should take appropriate measures to compensate the victims," read a statement from HRW.

Kurdish Peshmerga in northern Iraq are besieging the key town Bashiqa, which lies on a crucial supply route twelve kilometers from Mosul, where Irai forces have commenced the battle to liberation the city from two years of rule by the so-called Islamic State.  Meanwhile, IS forces and sleeper cells have struck hundreds of kilometers away in Rutba, attempting to divert some of the Iraqis poised to retake Mosul.

Pope Francis granted a rare and mysterious private audience to Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, in the midst of the South American country's deepening political and economic crisis.  Venezuela's conservative opposition is butthurt because the courts and election authority ruled against a proposed recall election to remove the democraticaly-elected Maduro from office.  The Holy See said the Pope "wanted to offer his contribution in support of constitutionality in the country and to every step that could help to resolve the open questions and create greater trust between the parties".  President Maduro swung by Italy on his way back from the Middle East, where he turned production cuts to drive the price of oil back up.