Terrorists target tourists seeing the sites in Egypt – Drug war money is disappearing in the Colombian military – European leaders are working on an alternative to a US-run Internet – And a lot more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs.

A bomb ripped through a tourist bus in the Sinai Peninsula, killing the Egyptian bus driver and there are conflicting reports on whether two or three South Korean tourists were killed.  The explosion was caught on video.  Several people were hurt.  Authorities believe the bomb was planted under the driver’s seat during an overnight stop at Santa Katarina; it detonated at the border crossing into Israel.

Boko Haram militants have killed more than a hundred villagers in Nigeria’s northeastern Borno State, in the Islamist group’s latest atrocity.  Gunmen first rounded up the men in Izghe village and killed them; after that they went door-to-door killing anyone they could find.

Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez has told supporters via Twitter that he will take part in anti-government demonstrations on Tuesday, even if it means his arrest.  The government has an arrest warrant out for Lopez, blaming him for the violence last week that have left at least three people dead, including a government supporter.  Lopez has been in hiding since last Wednesday’s deaths.

Colombia’s President Juan Manuel Santos says he is outraged at allegations of massive corruption in the military.  The Colombian news magazine “Semana” reports the US sends millions to Colombia to fight the “war on drugs” – But some generals and other senior officers are accused of taking bribes of up to 50 percent of the contracts they awarded.  Others are suspected of diverting money that was meant to be spent at the barracks on petrol and other supplies.

The US is investigating a possible underground radiation leak at a military nuclear waste site near Carlsbad, New Mexico in the desert southwest.  Radiation alarms went off 11:30 PM local time on Friday.  The Department of Energy says none of the 139 employees working above ground at  the site were exposed to radioactive contaminants.

US Secretary of State John Kerry is blasting climate change deniers, and urging all nations to act against climate change  (the US and China are the world’s biggest emitters of greenhouse gases).  At an environmental conference in Indonesia, Kerry says there was scientific proof of climate change threatening not only the environment, but also the world economy – and there is still a “window of time” to prevent the worst consequences, but it is rapidly closing.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso is warning that a newly-independent Scotland could find it “impossible” to join the European Union.  Scottish voters will tackle an independence referendum in September.  Pro-independence forces say they would look to gain membership through article 48 of the treaty of the EU, but Barroso is pouring cold oatmeal all over that.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel will bring up the possibility of building up a European communications network to help improve data protection when she meets with French President Francois Hollande on Wednesday.  The plan is to avoid emails and other data automatically passing through the United States.  Germany and others are angry with the US after revelations of National Security Agency (NSA) spying on its supposed allies.