Hello Australia!! - Justice could be coming for the MH17 families - A sordid spousal abuse saga sinks Trump's Defense nominee - Jail for the Kiwi who shared video of the Mosque Massacre - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Investigators are getting close to naming those responsible for the downing of Malaysian Airlines flight MH17 over Ukraine in 2014, and charges could be filed in a court in Utrecht, Netherlands on Wednesday.  The crowded passenger plane was traveling from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur when it passed over a battle between Ukrainian forces and Russian-backed rebels, and was likely hit by a Russian-made missile.  All 298 passengers and crew were killed, including 38 Australians.  The SBS reports the accused "are likely to be Russian nationals or Moscow-aligned Ukrainians".

More chaos from the Trump administration as tales of gruesome domestic abuse have apparently sunk the nomination of Acting Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan to take the post permanently.  The FBI's background check held up the former Boeing executive's Senate confirmation hearings.  Shanahan apparently got into a vicious fist fight with his now-ex-wife in 2010; a year later, he defended his then-17-year old son William who had beaten his own mother bloody with a baseball bat.  Shanahan has since renounced his defense of the horrific attack.  Trump is expected to nominate Army Secretary Mark Esper to the role.

A New Zealand court sentenced a man to 21 months in prison for sharing video of the Christchurch Mosque Massacre with the intent of glorifying it.  Philip Arps - who had compared himself to Nazi war criminal Rudolf Hess, and called the footage "awesome" - pleaded guilty to two counts of distributing the video, which came from the livestream of an Australian white supremacist who murdered 51 people.  Several other New Zealanders are facing similar charges.

An encephalitis outbreak has killed 113 children in India's eastern state of Bihar this month, ten of them dying just yesterday.  With dozens of children hospitalized and more cases trickling in every day, area parents are accusing health officials of acting too slowly to try to contain the problem - one is being blasted for appearing to be more concerned with cricket scores than the dead and dying children.  Campaigners say there aren't enough drugs to treat the outbreak, which seems to be linked to lychee nuts.

The battle against Ebola can't get a break.  Now, health officials are worried about 300,000 people being displaced by fighting in just a month in the DR Congo, where the outbreak has killed more than 1,400 people.  It's making tracking patients and infections next to impossible.  Meanwhile, Uganda's health minister is authorizing health workers to use three experimental Ebola treatments - ZMapp, Regeneron, and Remdesivir -  week after a Congolese family brought the virus into the country.  The good news is that so far it appears that the deadly virus has not passed from person-to-person in Uganda.

Former Egyptian President Muhammad Morsi, who literally dropped dead in a Cairo courtroom yesterday, was quietly buried.  The UN is demanding an investigation into probable mistreatment of the only elected leader that country ever had while he was in prison.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel scared the hell out of everyone by appearing to shake violently at a function; it turned out she was suffering dehydration and she says she is doing fine now.

Berlin is backing a plan to freeze rents in the German capital for the next five years, potentially taking the lead in controlling housing costs which have soared in so many world cities.  Housing costs in the city have doubled over the past decade, and the freeze would "protect against rent increases for 1.5 million apartments".  The city's senate passed the law, and the Berlin regional parliament must pass it before it becomes law.