One of the Paris gunmen is seen in a posthumous video declaring his loyalty to Islamic State – After mass protests, Haiti heads into a dangerous phase – How not to express one’s frustration airline delays in a totalitarian state – These are your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

One of the gunmen involved in the three days of terrorism in France apparently produced a video that was released onto the Internet after his death.  Amedy Coulibaly is seen in Arab dress, sitting and pledging his loyalty to Islamic State (IS) and the group’s leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.  Coulibaly’s actual connections to IS are unclear, but it does show that at the very least, last week’s violence was inspired by larger, organized terrorist groups. 

Austrian law authorities detained two teenage girls for allegedly trying to travel to Syria as potential wives for militants fighting there.  Marcus Neher of the Salzburg public prosecutor's office says the girls were “offering themselves as spouses for IS fighters”.  Austrian media reports say one suspect is 16-years old and originally came from Chechnya, while the other girl is 17 and born in Bosnia.

A bus veered off of a mountain road in southern Brazil and careened more than 50 meters into a riverbank.  Nine people are dead and at least 25 more people are recovering from various injuries.  This happened near the city of Alfredo Wagner according to the bus company, which adds that the cause is not known.  The bus was carrying Brazilians home to the southern costal city of Florianopolis from Posadas, Argentina.

The death toll from the collision of an oil tanker and a passenger bus in Pakistan is now at least 62 lives lost.  The tanker was speeding on the wrong side of the road on a highway near the southern port city of Karachi.

Haiti is heading for a showdown between President Michel Martelly and protesters who are demanding long-delayed elections be held.  Violent demonstrations picked up intensity over the past two days, leading into Monday’s deadline that could see parliament dissolved and the president ruling by decree.  Tensions are enflamed by the fact that Monday is also the fifth anniversary of the Earthquake that killed at least 160,000 people.  More than 80,000 Haitians are still living in squalid conditions and the nation’s destroyed infrastructure isn’t anywhere near being repaired.

Gambia’s President Yahya Jammeh is backing off his earlier allegations that former colonial power Britain played a role in last month’s failed coup attempt.  Two weeks ago, Jammeh initially accused dissidents based in Britain, the United States and Germany of involvement.  Now, Jammeh says there was “no evidence of British involvement”.  The US has arrested and charged two US Citizens of Gambian origin in connection with the coup attempt.

China arrested two airline passengers for an alleged case of air rage that set in before the plane even left the ground.  Passengers were boarded onto the China Eastern flight at Chengdu.  But deicing the wings and fuselage for some reason took five hours.  The two men – a passenger and a tour guide – grew frustrated to the point that authorities say they opened three emergency exits and tried to lead an insurrection among the passengers.  With the trip to Beijing now aborted, the pilot taxied back to the terminal, where 25 people were arrested.  The two worst are being detained for two weeks.  China’s aviation system is regarded to be pretty awful, and flight delays are common through the system.