Hello Australia!! - Searchers find the first debris from crashed EgyptAir Flight MS802 - Israel's cabinet is getting a troubling addition - EoDM singer Jesse Hughes opens his mouth, gets his band kicked out of two festivals - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

French investigators have begun questioning and checking the background of workers at Charles De Gaulle airport, who might have had access to EgyptAir Flight MS802, which took off Wednesday night from Paris and crashed into the Mediterranean Sea, killing all 66 people on board.  These are workers who are assigned "red badges" to get them into secure areas of the airport:  baggage handlers, maintenance workers, gate agents, security guards, airline boarding staff, and others.  Meanwhile, search and recovery teams have spotted human remains, two seats, and suitcases believed to be from the downed Airbus A320.  Authorities say there still has not been a credible claim of responsibility, assuming the plane was brought down by a terrorist act.

Israel's Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon abruptly resigned, declaring he can no longer trust Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu because of the rise of "extremist and dangerous elements" in the government.  Netanyahu almost immediately nominated former Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman to replace Mr. Yaalon.  The 57-year-old Lieberman is one of Israel's most polarizing politicians, having once called for the beheading of Israeli Arabs deemed "disloyal".  It also means that Israel's formidable military goes from being led by a general who led a most elite commando units and later was its chief of staff; to an ideologue with limited experience and who never rose above the rank of corporal.  And we all know how that works out.

Is suspended President Dilma Rousseff becoming a political prisoner in Brazil's presidential palace?  Acting president Michel Temer ordered the military to surround the Palacio da Alvorada, and soldiers are limiting access to Ms. Rousseff - who under Brazilian law is entitled to reside in the official residence during her suspension and trial on allegations of accounting irregularities.  "Anyone visiting President Dilma has to go through a checkpoint," complained Brazilian Senate Vice President Jorge Vianna, who said he faced a lengthy delay before being allowed to speak with Dilma.  "This means that the elected president is under siege?  What country is this?  What provisional government is this?" he asked on the senate floor. 

Nigeria's military says the second young woman rescued from Boko Haram this week did attend the state boarding school in Chibok, where the terrorists infamously kidnapped hundreds of women and girls in a raid two years ago.  But she wasn't there on the day of the raid, and was kidnapped from her home in a different incident.  This highlights how widespread these abductions are in Nigeria, and how the Islamist State-affiliated extremist group extremist group uses the young women used as sex slaves and boys as child soldiers.  The second girl was rescued in a battle that liberated 97 women and children and killed 35 extremists.  Earlier this week, a young woman who was part of the 219 girls kidnapped in the Chibok raid was rescued by a vigilante group.

India has recorded its hottest day ever - The mercury peaked at 51 C degrees in Phalodi in Rajasthan state.  Even in the hot weeks preceding the monsoon season, this sort of prolonged, life-threatening heat is unusual.  The government has declared a heat emergency for the next few days, and is urging hospitals to set aside bed space for heatstroke patients. 

Japan has registered its outraged with Washington, after an American employee of a  US air force base admitted killing a Japanese woman on Okinawa.  32-year old Kenneth Franklin Shinzato admitted to police that he strangled 20-year old Rina Shimabukuro, and dumped her body in an area overgrown with weeds.  It comes amid fierce public opposition to expanding a US military base on the island, and is a reminder of a string of violent and deadly crimes that US military personnel have committed against Japanese civilians since the 1990s.

The Eagles of Death Metal have been dropped from two French music festivals, after singer Jesse Hughes repeated allegations that French security guards might have allowed terrorists into the Bataclan theater during the Paris Terrorist attacks last November.  Hughes was forced by public outcry to apologize for similar comments made in March.  Hughes claims he is suffering from PTSD from the massacre that occurred at his concert at the Bataclan theater on 13 November.

An unusually strong and unusually shallow earthquake struck in the outback early this morning.  The USGS says the magnitude 5.9 temblor struck at a depth of 10 kilometers around 460 kilometers southwest of Alice Springs at 4:14 AM.  NT Police duty superintendent Angela Stringer told the ABC, "It occurred in the middle of the desert and as far as we can tell it was far from any community and there have been no reports of injuries or damage.