Good Morning Australia!! - Italy investigates a mass death in the Mediterranean - US military foul ups allowed the Texas Church Massacre gunman to slide through a flawed system - Why Paris is refusing to invite Trump to a big meeting - And more from your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Italian officials have launched an investigation into the deaths of 26 teenage girls found in an immigrant ship that had set off on the perilous sea crossing from Libya to Europe.  Although it's not uncommon for people to die on the ships, especially after they made the debilitating journey across the Sahara from equatorial or southern Africa, all were Nigerian, all were 14 to 18-years of age.  The investigation will hopefully determine how they died, if they were physically or sexually abused, and if they were being trafficked for prostitution.  A Spanish shipping vessel discovered the bodies in the Mediterranean on Sunday near a collapse rubber dinghy.

The US Air Force apparently made a myriad of foul-ups in handling the prosecution, confinement, and discharge of Devin Patrick Kelley, who would later go on to shoot up a church in Sutherland Springs, Texas last weekend, killing 26 people.  Kelley had escaped from a mental health facility in 2012 after he was caught sneaking guns onto an Air Force base in a plot to murder his superiors.  The Air Force also failed to notify civilian authorities of his court martial and dishonorable discharge for spousal and child abuse, which should have precluded him from purchasing guns the legal way.  Authorities say neither religion nor race were part of Kelley's motivation, and point towards to the conflicts he had with the family of his second wife.  They're also trying to crack the encryption on his mobile phone to try and get more information.

Fresh from consolidating power in his wing of the Saudi royal family, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz is accusing Iran of an "act of war" by supplying missiles to the Houthi rebels of Yemen.  Saudi Arabia's missile defense system appears to have successfully knocked down a Houthi missile fired at Riyadh over the weekend.  Iran's foreign minister condemned the prince's "dangerous allegations as a violation of the international laws and the UN Charter" and slammed Saudi Arabia's "provocative measures in the region". 

The Saudis closed Yemen's borders in retaliation for the missile strike, preventing United Nations and Red Cross aid efforts from going through.  This is happening to a country whose health care and social fabrics have been torn asunder by civil war, where a child dies of preventable causes such as malnutrition or diarrhea every ten minutes.  "We have serious concerns that these reported closures will aggravate an already dire humanitarian emergency with appalling consequences for the civilian population," said UN Rupert Colville, spokesman for the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, "We hope that it is reversed immediately."

Syria is signing on to the Paris Climate Accord, leaving the United States - under the rule of the moron orange clown Donald Trump - as the only nation on earth not dedicated to keeping global warming to less than 2 C degrees above pre-industrial levels.  The US is the world's second largest greenhouse gas emitter, behind China.  "Syria's decision shows the breadth of support for the Paris agreement," said Alden Meyer of the Union of Concerned Scientists.

As the only world leader to cling to climate change denial like a stain, France says Donald Trump is not invited to a gathering of 100 leaders in Paris next month.  French President Emmanuel Macron plans a summit to push his "Make our Planet Great Again" agenda to leaders who are "especially committed" to applying the Paris accord.