How low can Islamic State jihadis go?  Pretty low! – Big jailbreak in Haiti – Cops use a taser on a little girl – And a lot more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

PM Tony Abbott is condemning a photograph posted to social media showing a severed head being held by the son of an Australian man who went to Syria to fight for Islamic State.  The image on Khaled Sharrouf’s account shows the seven-year old boy in a baseball cap and blue shirt lifting the head with both hands; Below it is the caption, “That’s my boy!”  It was reportedly taken in Raqa, one of the areas dealing with numerous Islamic State atrocities, and Sharrouf is the same piece of work who has threatened to launch terror attacks in Oz. 

Gunmen attacked Haiti’s main prison and busted out a businessman who has been imprisoned since 2012 on charges of kidnapping at least two children.  The government is offering about US$25,000 reward for information leading to the recapture of Clifford Brandt.  It’s not clear how many other inmates escaped in the chaos, but ten have been recaptured.

The Spanish priest who was evacuated from Liberia to Madrid after he caught Ebola will get the same experimental drug that was given to two US relief workers who now appear to be recovering from the often-fatal disease.  ZMapp by Mapp Pharmaceuticals of San Diego, California is in the extremely early stages of development has only been tested on monkeys.  Liberia and the other countries hit by the West Africa Ebola outbreak want it, but there are very few doses that exist. 

At least 300,000 of residents of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine are reportedly fleeing the city as government troops pound rebel positions with artillery fire.  Daily trains to Moscow are packed with people trying to get across the border.  Russia wants to send an “aid convoy” to help ethnic Russians in Donetsk, but Kiev says that convoy also has troops and military hardware, and is a cover for a Russian invastion.

US Secretary of State John Kerry again on Sunday pressed for a freeze on hostile acts in waters contested by China and its Southeast Asian neighbors in the South China Sea.  Kerry is pushing for an agreement to end all actions that risk further inflaming regional relations, following several tense encounters in the disputed waters.  China has claimed exclusive rights to the South China Sea, which mostly is well beyond its internationally recognized maritime zone.

In America’s Upper Midwest, a mother is suing the police department for using a Taser on her eight-year old daughter.  Police say the little girl was suicidal and armed with a knife, and the Pierre, South Dakota police brass ruled it was a justified use of force.  On an eight-year old girl.  Dawn Stenstrom’s lawsuit says, ““The force of the electricity shot through her body, lifted her, and threw her against a wall.”  At least 500 people have been killed by such weapons in the United States since 2001, according to Amnesty International.

Peru will provide free electricity to over 2 million of its poorest citizens by using energy from the sun.  Energy and Mining Minister Jorge Merino said that the National Photovoltaic Household Electrification Program will distribute solar power cells to 500,000 extremely poor households in areas that lack even basic access to the power grid.  The scheme will allow 95 percent of Peru to have access to electricity by the end of 2016.