Obama says, “Hello, Dalai!” and China probably won’t like it – Fukushima springs another radioactive leak – Germany finds three more alleged war criminals from World War II – And a lot more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs.

A massive newly discovered leak at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant in Japan has spouted 100 tonnes of highly radioactive water.  Tokyo Electric power Company (TEPCO) claims that even through the faulty storage tank is a scant few meters from the ocean, the water probably didn’t reach the Pacific.  This water measured 230 million becquerels per liter of radioactive isotopes – World Health Organization guidelines advise against drinking water with radioactivity levels higher than 10 becquerels per liter.

The search for the last of seven Japanese divers who were lost off of Bali has been called off.  Five were rescued after three days at sea, one was found dead, and the last remains missing.  Indonesian police have arrested the captain of the boat that took them to their dive site for negligence – the surviving divers say he was not there to pick them up when they surfaced.

China is likely to be upset at US President Barack Obama’s plans to greet Tibetan exile leader the Dalai Lama at the White House later today.  The meeting will almost certainly draw a rebuke from China, which has regularly lashed out at world leaders for meeting with the Dalai Lama.  Obama has praised the Dalai Lama’s commitment to nonviolence and his advocacy for a “middle way” in Tibet's long-running sovereignty dispute with China.

German police arrested three men – aged 88, 92, and 94 – suspected of being guards at the nazi death camp at Auschwitz, and taking part in the murders of some of the 1.1 million who died there.  The old men were taken into custody and sent to Hohenasperg prison hospital in Ludwigsburg. 

Greece’s neo-nazi Golden Dawn party has more legal trouble:  Investigators are asking that nine more Golden Dawn MPs have their parliamentary immunity lifted to allow criminal charges to be filed against them.  It would mean that all 18 neo-nazi members of Greece’s parliament would be accused of running a criminal organization.  Greece began the crackdown on the right-wingers after the murder of a popular anti-fascist musician.

The governor of Nigeria’s central bank has been suspended for alleged “financial recklessness and misconduct” – after he pointed out that US$20 Billion of oil revenue had gone missing.  Lamido Sanusi is actually an internationally responded banker and was named central banker of the year in 2010 by Banker Magazine.  Sanusi's allegations threaten to expose high-level fraud in Nigeria's notoriously opaque and corrupt oil sector.

Investigators say needles and drugs were found in the cabin with two former US Navy SEALS who were discovered dead on the Maersk Alabama cargo ship.  The cause of death hasn’t been determined.  The men were part of a private security force on board to protect the ship as it traveled through dangerous Indian Ocean waters.

India’s parliament approved a bill to create a 29th state.  Telangana will be carved out of Andhra Pradesh in the region surrounding the city of Hyderabad, a tech and pharmaceutical center.  The president is expected to sign the bill.

Amid reports of street violence and public resentment of the expense of the World Cup, Brazil announced it will add 70 thousand security officers to police this year’s FIFA championships.  That means a total 170,000 cops will deployed in 12 World Cup cities.  Last year, more than a million people took to the streets in a series of protests against excessive spending in preparations for the World Cup and the 2016 Olympics.