Hello Australia - An investigation is ordered into the crane collapse at Islam's holiest mosque - Hungary is accused of "abysmal" treatment of refugees after a troubling video emerges - There is no laughter after Peter Dutton's "joke" about rising seas is caught on video - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

At least 107 people were killed when a giant construction crane collapsed and crashed through the roof of the Grand Mosque at Mecca, Saudi Arabia.  The place was packed with worshipers for Friday Night prayers, and hundreds are injured.  A powerful storm was blowing through Mecca at the time, with winds up to 85 kph.  The annual Hajj pilgrimage starts in just over a week, and Saudi Arabia is in a multiyear project to expand the Grand Mosque at Islam's holiest site with plans to make it big enough to accommodate 2.2 million people at a time.

Hungary is resuming its hard line on incoming refugees fleeing war and starvation in he Middle East and sub-Saharan Africa.  Prime Minister Viktor Orban says those crossing the border will be arrested as "illegal immigrants" starting next week, because past refugees have "rebelled".  In fact, 150,000 refugees have passed through Hungary to more progressive countries so far this year, with no intention to stay. 

Meanwhile, Hungary's treatment of refugees is being criticized after a damning video emerged, showing cops throwing food at refugees in holding pens.  Human Rights Watch said migrants were being kept in "abysmal" conditions at two detention centers in Roszke, lacking food and medical care.  The group quoted two migrants who described the conditions as only fit for animals.  In Geneva, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said it will be monitoring Hungary.  "Obviously, we expect authorities to respect rights of refugees whether they are the police or army," said UNHCR spokesman William Spindler.

The president of Kiribati is wondering about what kind of people run Australia's government.  This comes after Immigration Minister Peter Dutton joked with Prime Minister Tony Abbott about rising sea levels caused by global warning - which conservative supposedly don't believe in - inundating low-lying island nations such as Kiribati.  There was also a reference to "Island Time" which did not seem to be complimentary.  Dutton and Abbott were caught on video having a laugh over the remark, until Social Services Minister Scott Morrison pointed out there was a microphone above their heads.

The context was that PM Abbott had just returned from talks in which island leader expressed their concerns over rising sea levels and how its will turn their citizens into refugees - likely to seek help from Australia.  "It shows a sense of moral irresponsibility quite unbecoming of leadership in any capacity," lamented Kiribati President Anote Tong, "I find that extremely sad, extremely disappointing that we are making jokes about a very serious issue."  Marshall Islands Foreign Minister Tony De Brum tweeted he was "dismayed".  And opposition leader Bill Shorten said "it was a bad joke by a minister who is a bad joke" echoing US President Barack Obama's words that "any leader who doesn't take climate change seriously is not fit to lead".

A bomb blast killed at least seven people in a Nigerian refugee camp for people driven from their homes by the Boko Haram Islamist insurgency. 

A US Federal Judge in Alabama declared a mistrial in the case of a cop caught on video using a MMA take-down technique to throw a grandfather to the ground.  Prosecutors say they will re-try fired officer Eric Parker.  58-year-old Sureshbhai Patel was left partially paralyzed.  In February. Mr. Patel was visiting from India, unable to speak English, and taking a walk in his son's neighborhood.  A racist neighbor called police about the mysterious man, cops showed up, and Parker slammed Patel to the ground with the crippling move without provocation. 

Hundreds of thousands of people flooded the streets of Barcelona to rally for Catalan independence from Spain.  Police counted 1.4 million people, while the Spanish government - which really, really opposes the idea - downplayed the crowd at 500,000.  A separatist coalition says if it wins majorities in elections later this month, it will pursue an independence effort.  In a non-binding referendum last year, 80 percent of Catalan voters backed independence.

Former Texas governor Rick Perry is the first to drop out of the race for the US Republican Party presidential nomination.  All of the air in that game is being sucked up by billionaire business-clown Donald Trump.  Perry didn't mention names, but he urged republicans not to take up the xenophobic, anti-Mexican immigrant line spouted by Trump.

Cuba will release more than 3,500 prisoners as a goodwill gesture before the visit Pope Francis.  Cuba did this twice before for the visits of Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI.