Good Morning Australia!! - The wheels of justice finally begin to turn more than four decades after a civilian massacre - Did Russia's doped athletes cheat Aussies out of their Gold Medals? - Japan protests over "compensated dating" - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

British detectives arrested a 66-year old former soldier in the 1972 Bloody Sunday massacre of civilians in Derry, Northern Ireland.  The County Antrim man, once a paratrooper, would have been 23 years old at the time when British forces opened fire at peaceful Civil Rights protesters - 14 of whom died as a result.  This investigation got underway after the Saville Inquiry determined that the British fired the first shots on unarmed civilians without provocation.  It's believed the former soldier is responsible for the deaths of two boys, aged 15 and 18, and a 20-year old man.  This is the first arrest in the 44 years since the massacre.

The Kremlin is dismissing allegations of widespread doping among Russian athletes, corruption, and the involvement of the FSB secret police in drug testing labs.  The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) recommends that Russia be banned from international competition, including next year's Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.  Athletics Australia is echoing that call, and 50k walker Gerald Talent is going so far as to say he was robbed of the Gold Medal at London in 2012 because of Russian doping.  The International Olympic Committee is asking for immediate action in instituting lifetime bans against five athletes an five coaches specifically named in WADA's report.

Egypt's military has freed investigative journalist Hossam Bahgat, after officials reportedly accused him of publishing false information.  Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch raised red alerts over the weekend with Baghat's arrest and detention.  Egyptian officials were upset over his publication of a report that accused a judge of releasing dangerous jihadist prisoners and attempting to blame it on deposed president Mohamed Morsi.

Japan's government is demanding a UN official take back her remarks about the shameful practice of Enjo Kosai - "compensated dating" - in which creepy older men pay to date a woman or girl sometimes as young as 13 years old.  The "arrangement" often involves child prostitution.  Maud de Boer-Buquicchio, the UN special rapporteur on sex crimes against children, said last month that as many as 13 percent of Japanese teenage girls are taking part in this.  She later clarified he remarks to say that the number had been reported to her from "open sources".  The Foreign Ministry in Tokyo maintains there is no statistical basis for this, and that it is "unacceptable" to use unreliable information.

Protesters have trapped the mayor of the northern Argentina town of Concepcion in his own city hall, setting tyres aflame around the building.  They accuse centrist Mayor Roberto Sanchez of refusing to honor their contracts.  But Sanchez says the previous mayor put as many as 500 of his cronies on the payroll in his final days in office.  Sanchez told reporters that the ghost payroll workers only put in a day every few weeks, but collect pay for the entire month.

Portugal's new Left-wing alliance is a step closer to taking power.  The Socialist Party and its two partners cast majority votes in Parliament and defeated the conservative government's program, causing the government to collapse in an ensuing no-confidence vote.  It's now up to conservative sympathizer President Anibal Cavaco Silva to ask the left-of-center majority to form a new government, or call new elections.  Socialist leader Antonio Costa says his coalition would "guarantee conditions of stable governance".

New Orleans R&B legend Allen Toussaint is dead of a heart attack at age 77.  A fan uploaded a video of the man's last gig to YouTube, which took place on Monday night at the Teatro Lara club in Madrid, Spain.  He collapsed at his hotel a short time later and was rushed to hospital, but he could not be revived.  Toussant was a prolific songwriter, and many of his tunes would become hits for other artists, such as:  Al Hirt's version of "Java"; the Rolling Stones' cover of "Fortune Teller", also a hit for The Who; Lee Dorsey and "Working in a Coalmine", and Glen Campbell's "Southern Nights".