Good Morning Australia!! - Several are killed in an attack on Istanbul's airport - Rio cops tell tourists, "Welcome to Hell" - The Brexit is causing investors to pull out of the UK, where the Chancellor warns taxes would be going up - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

At least 28 people are dead in a suspected suicide attack on Istanbul's Ataturk Airport.  Two explosions and gunfire came from the outside of the international terminal, and police had fired shots at the attackers at some point.  20 more people were injured and transported to hospital.  Recent bombings in Turkey have been the work of Islamist extremists or Kurdish separatists.

Republicans in the US House of Representatives released their latest report on the Benghazi attack in 2012 - and they still haven't found evidence of wrongdoing by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, now running for President.  The report criticizes the military for a slow response to the attack on the diplomatic compound that killed US Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens and three security agents.  Republican lawmakers tried to spin, spin, spin it on cable TV network news shows, but like the rest of their Clinton conspiracy theories of the last 26 years:  There's no "there" there.

Off duty cops in Rio de Janeiro welcomed travelers to the Brazilian city with a banner reading, "Welcome to Hell."  They're warning that visitors to the Summer Olympics in a few weeks will not be safe, because police and firefighters are not being paid.  Rio's governor isn't disagreeing.  He's still waiting for the coup government of interim president Michel Tmeer to make good with US$860 Million, without which the cash-strapped state may not even be able to afford gasoline for police patrols.

Scientists say a large Helium gas field has been discovered in Tanzania's East African Rift Valley.  There had been fears that the world's supplies of Helium - which is used in MRI scanners as well as in spacecraft, telescopes, and radiation monitors, not to mention children's balloons - had been running out.  Until now, Helium gas had come about as a side product of oil and gas drilling.

Aussies, I hate to keep humping this Brexit story, but it is so damned entertaining.  How often to do get to watch one of the world's great nation shoot itself in the foot? 

UK Chancellor George Osborne says tax hikes and spending cuts will be needed to deal with the UK's impending exit from the European Union, noting that his pre-referendum warnings of economic fallout from the Brexit vote "have started to be borne out by events".  Osborne insisted that it was the responsibility of the "Leave" campaign to present a plan that the UK should follow.  "It's very clear that the country is going to be poorer as a result of what's happening to the economy," he said.  "We are absolutely going to have to provide fiscal security to people, in other words we are going to have to show the country and the world that the country can live within its means."  Neither Boris Johnson nor Nigel Farage have presented that plan.

The first European Parliament meeting since the Brexit vote degenerated into a name-calling festival, as MEPs heckled UK representative Nigel Farage with taunts of, "Why are you even here?"  Others accused him of using "nazi propaganda" in the "Leave" campaign, while still others booed as he spoke.  Farage helped whip up the racists and xenophobes to lead the "Leave" side to a 52-48 percent victory with advertisements showing long lines of refugees, implying that they'd be coming to Britain soon.  Farage responded by accusing MEPs of being "in denial" and predicting that the UK wouldn't be the last nation to leave the EU - even though the UK hasn't gone anywhere, yet.

Prime Minister David Cameron had warm exchanges with European leaders at the meeting, but the polite greetings belied the European attitude towards the Brexit:  Digging in for the upcoming testy negotiations, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Europe will defend its interests and the UK cannot dictate the terms of its relationship with the EU.  "Anyone wishing to leave this family cannot expect to lose all the obligations but keep the privileges," she said, noting that the UK cannot be allowed to "cherry pick" which benefits it wants to keep.

The MEPs from Scotland and Northern Ireland insisted that Nigel Farage doesn't represent their constituents.  Scottish MEP Alyn Smith got a standing ovation for urging members of the European Parliament to stand by his country:  "Please, remember this: Scotland did not let you down.  Please, I beg you, do not let Scotland down now," stated Mr. Smith.  Northern Ireland's MEP Martina Anderson of Sinn Fein said, "We in the North of Ireland are not bound by the UK vote.  The last thing the people of Northern Ireland need is a new border with 27 member states."

Back in London, things were looking dicey for opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.  80 percent of Labour MPs rejected his leadership in a no-confidence vote, with an eye on inevitable upcoming elections - they're worried that the leader who couldn't rally voters to stay in the EU won't be able to rally voters to a Labour victory.  Corbyn refused to step down, saying:  "I was democratically elected leader of our party for a new kind of politics by 60 percent of Labour members and supporters, and I will not betray them by resigning."

Thousands of people gathered for a pro-European Union rally in Westminster, despite organizers attempting to call it off over crown safety concerns.  Carrying EU flags and signs lampooning the likes of Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage, they demanded that last week's Brexit vote be ignored - it was, after all, a non-binding referendum.  "I felt like my future had been taken away and then I have been angry for most of the weekend," said 23-year old recent university graduate Laura Clark, who relocated from Wales to the international city of London to start her adult life.

Virgin chief Richard Branson says the Brexit vote has already killed a deal he was working:  "We were about to do a very big deal, we canceled that deal, that would have involved 3,000 jobs," Mr. Branson said while warning that job losses are on the way.  Branson says his company has lost a third of its value since Friday, and Chinese investors are backing out of several projects.

All because some soccer hooligans hate foreigners.