Who’s disobeying a court order at Manus Island? – The reprisals have yet to come from the brutal end and aftermath to Sri Lanka’s civil war  – Heads roll after a cheating scandal at the world’s biggest nuclear arsenal – And a lot more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Despite having a court order allowing him to be there, authorities at the Manus Island detention center have ejected an Australian barrister from the facility.  Jay Williams represents 75 asylum seekers locked up in the facility on Papua New Guinea.  ABC reports it’s unclear which country tried to stop Williams, Fairfax seems to put it on PNG.  Williams could seek reentry as early as today.

The United Nations Human Rights Council is paving the way for an investigation into abuses at the close of Sri Lanka's civil war.  In May 2009, government forces defeated the rebel Tamil Tigers after 26 years of civil war, but there have been reports saying that as many as 40,000 Tamil civilians may have been killed by government troops in the final months. 

The Philippine government signed a peace deal with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF.. no, seriously.. MILF?), ending a conflict that has killed more than 120,000 people over four decades.  It creates a self-rule area for Muslims in Mindanao in the Philippines' south, one that will have its own police force, a regional parliament and the power to levy taxes.

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan ordered YouTube blocked, after a recording of top security officials discussing possible military action in Syria was uploaded.   Erdogan had previously, and hilariously, ordered Twitter blocked after is users spread recordings of him instructing his son to hide big, giant stacks of money from a police investigation.  But Turks used third-party sites that allowed them to get around the government’s blocks, and Turkish Twitter traffic actually increased after the ban.

El Salvador’s conservative Arena party is conceding the presidential election after weeks of demanding a new poll or at least a recount.  Arena candidate Norman Quijano lost the race by a small handful of votes to former Marxist Rebel Salvador Sanchez Ceren, who despite his past is promising to respect all voters and serve as a moderate.  Sanchez Ceren says he’ll visit several Central American neighbors in the coming days, and go to the United States before he takes office on 1 June.

Qatar sentenced an American couple to three years in prison in the death of their daughter.  Matthew and Grace Huang say it’s a travesty of justice, and Qatar is trying to save the reputation of its racist cops, who looked at their ethnic identity and assumed the couple starved the girl to death to sell her organs on the black market.  The Huangs maintain that 8-year old Gloria had an eating disorder stemming from her impoverished childhood in Ghana, from where she was adopted.  A second autopsy on Gloria carried out in Los Angeles showed the Qatari cops never performed the basic forensic exams they claimed to have done.

The US Air Force has fired some high-ranking officers tasked with safeguarding nuclear weapons for a proficiency exam-cheating scheme that implicated scores of servicemembers.  Nine Colonels and Lieutenant Colonels were found to have creating and enabling the culture that led to the cheating.  The lower ranked officers will soon face discipline for cheating.

A French court is ordering a tabloid to pay more than A$22,000 to Julie Gayet for revealing her affair with President Francois Hollande.  It’s about a third of what she asked for, but winning’s winning.  The magazine Closer published photographs of Hollande and Gayet arriving separately at an apartment in January.