Good Morning Australia!! - A shooting at an AFP building claims the life of an officer - Top tech firms help the states fight Trump's immigration order - Nigeria's President is overstaying his sick leave - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Baby White Lion Cubs!!  Baby White Lion Cubs!!  At the Magdeburg Zoo in Germany.

Baby White Rhino alert!!  Baby White Rhino alert!!  At the Ramat Gan zoological center in Israel.

Australian Federal Police say a female officer is dead after sustaining a gunshot wound to the head while inside the AFP headquarters on La Trobe Street on Melbourne.  This happened at about 6:00 PM last night, and the officer was rushed to the Royal Melbourne Hospital.  But early this morning, AFP Commissioner Andrew Colvin said she had died, an investigation is underway, and a coroner's report will be prepared.  While unusual, the death is not being treated as suspicious.

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse revealed some startling statistics about clergy sex abuse in Australia:  Seven percent of Catholic priests have allegedly sexually abused children; some orders have startlingly high numbers of accused clerics.  The commission says the Roman Catholic Church demonstrated a pattern of ignoring the victims and moving the abusive priests around to avoid accountability.  The commission is also investigating abuse at non-religious organizations and says 4,440 people say they were abused between 1980 and 2015.

Donald Trump wanted to rip up the deal to take 1,250 refugees from Australia's detention camps at Manus Island and Nauru - but Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull pushed back and convinced him to honor the agreement.  Billed as an exclusive report, Fairfax Media says Trump placed that now-infamous call to Malcolm to say that he "hated" the refugee deal and was "not going to do it".  But even after the PM seemed to believe he had carried the day and Trump hung up - abruptly - 25 minutes into the call, the White House sent out mixed signals within days, eventually settling on the message that the process will continue under close scrutiny.

Several top-level tech firms and lawyers for two US states argued against restoring Donald Trump's ban on immigrants from seven mainly Muslim countries, telling a US Federal Court in San Francisco that it would "unleash chaos again".  Thousands of people have protested the executive order at entry points to the US, and challenges are filed in other Federal court as well.

Israel has passed a controversial bill that drew condemnation from the government's own top lawyer legalizing dozens of Jewish outposts in the occupied West Bank.  Opponents say it will lead to partial annexation of the West Bank at the very least, and could inspire a multitude of new, illegal settlements built on privately owned Palestinian land that has now been retroactively declared Israel.

International monitors say the new round of fighting in Eastern Ukraine has eased.  But government troops and Russian-backed separatists have kept their heavy weaponry close to the front lines, in case they want to start killing each other again.  Last week, more than 30 people died in the worst outbreak of tension since the 2015 peace deal.

Police are on strike in Vitoria in Brazil's Espirito Santo state, leading to a spike in the murder rate - 51 since Saturday, compared to four in the whole of January.  Schools are closed and football matches are postponed as 200 cops seek better pay, and premiums for the night shift and hazardous duty.

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari is asking parliament to extend his medical leave in the UK, leading to concerns that his health may be worse than officials are publicly saying.  The 74-year old was supposed to have returned from London to Abuja over the weekend, after two weeks of "tests".  Affairs of the state are being handled by Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo.  Not everyone is happy about it, but some commend the move as a sign of respect to the constitution and the rule of law.