Hello Australia!! - Fear of more Trump chaos grips Washington - Justice is coming for Jacob Zuma - The death toll climbs in that Miami Bridge Collapse - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

White House staffers are on edge this weekend despite having been assured that there would be no dramatic changes to the orange clown Donald Trump's administration.  Chief of Staff John Kelly has reportedly been told personally by the clown that his job is secure, rumors abound about the future of National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster.  This is after this week's chaos that saw at least four prominent departures including Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, and amid fears that the moron is about to load up his cabinet with war hawks to take an even more belligerent tone with North Korea and Iran.  Trump himself is reportedly enjoying the attention, and stayed at work in the White House past 6:00 PM on Friday night, when he usually bugs out on Thursday.

The lawyer for adult actress Stormy Daniels says his client was threatened with physical violence to keep her alleged affair with Donald Trump a secret.  Attorney Michael Avenatti made the revelations on MSNBC on Friday morning, and spent the day doing the media rounds - although he did not provide any details or evidence of the alleged threat.  The White House has vaguely denied Daniels' claim, and she is expected to deliver her version on the US version of 60 Minutes on 25 March.  "The American people can judge for themselves on who is telling the truth and not and, again, we're not trying to silence anyone," Avenatti said, "We want both sides to lay out their version of the facts so the American people can decide for themselves what happened."

South Africa's chief prosecutor is reinstating corruption charges against former President Jacob Zuma over alleged bribes related to a sketchy US$2.5 Billion arms deal in the late 1990s.  "After consideration of the matter, there are reasonable prospects of a successful prosecution of Mr. Zuma," prosecutor Shaun Abrahams told reporters, "A trial court would be the most appropriate (venue) for the ventilation of the issues."  Zuma was forced to step down as president last month.  His financial advisor was already convicted and sentenced in the arms deal case.

The resignation of Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico failed to quell public disgust over corruption, and 65,000 people took to the streets in various cities to protest.  In the capital Bratislava, 50,000 protesters carried signs reading "Slovakia is going the wrong way" and "We want elections".  Corruption was already on the minds of Slovakian voters before last month's killing of journalist Jan Kuciak and his fiance; Kuciak had just completed an investigation linking government corruption to an Italian mafia gang.  The murder raised alarms about corruption and media freedom in the country.

Big rallies took place across Brazil to demand justice for a murdered Rio de Janeiro councilor who had campaigned against police brutality.  Born 38-years ago in Rio's most-violent favela, Marielle Franco was a popular politician known throughout Brazil as a champion of Women's Rights. 
Marielle Franco
Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
Ms. Franco and her driver were both shot dead while in her car on Wednesday.  President Michel Temer called her murder an attack on democracy and the rule of law and promised to get to the bottom of it.

British police are investigating the death of Russian businessman Nikolai Glushkov as a homicide, after an autopsy revealed that he died from compression to the neck.  Glushkov was found dead in his London home, days after Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were left in a critical condition from a chemical weapon attack.  Glushkov was a critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin.  Getting back to the Skripal case, French President Emmanuel Macron joined the US and UK in blaming Russia for the chemical attack.

International movie star Irrfan Khan says he is fighting a very rare neuroendocrine tumor, which can cause a variety of cancers with differing survival rates in any number of organs.  He did not give more details about his condition, but is seeking treatment.  The 51-year old acted in Hollywood blockbusters like "Life Of Pi", "Jurassic World", "Slumdog Millionaire", and "The Amazing Spider-Man"; his Bollywood hits include "Piku", "Maqbool", "Haasil", and "Paan Singh Tomar".

Authorities confirm that six people died in that pedestrian bridge collapse at Florida International University in Miami. 

A ski lift at a resort in Georgia in eastern Europe malfunctioned, flinging skiers around like rag dolls and smashing chairs.  Many chose to jump before they got slammed.