Hello Australia!! - Europe thought it was eliminating Measles, until anti-vaxxers made everything worse - British travelers try to get back to normal after the drone hooligans - IS executes two Scandanavian women - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Some flights have resumed at UK's Gatwick Airport, normally the country's second-busiest.  There was another brief suspension after another drone was sighted  at around 5:45 PM, local time.  This was after all flights were grounded for around 36 hours on Wednesday and Thursday because of large drone aircraft buzzing the runways, the operator or operators still unknown.  Police described the sighted drones as "industrial scale", ruling out the casual hobbyist or hooligan - someone sunk a lot of money into this.  Thousands of holiday travel plans were disrupted, and travelers are still urged to check with their airlines to find out the latest information on flights times and statuses.

Hungarians resumed protests against the conservative government's new and hated "slave law" which allowed employers to demand 400 hours of overtime from Workers and delays payments for up to three years.  The movement is uniting the opposition from Left and right and a new poll indicates that more than two-thirds of the Hungarian population support the protests and consider the law to be against the worker's best interests.  But so far, far-right Prime Minister Viktor Orban has shown no interest in listening to his own people.

The number of Measles cases in Europe is at a 20-year high, thanks to the uninformed conspiracy theorists of the anti-vaccination movement.  United Nations World Health Organization data analyzed by The Guardian shows that Europe's measles cases 60,000 this year.  That's more than double the number in 2017.  There have been 72 deaths; again, twice as many as in 2017.  "It is unimaginable that we have deaths because of measles - children dying because of measles.  We promised that by 2020 Europe would be measles free," complained EU Health Commissioner Vytenis Andriukaitis, who blamed the irresponsibility of far-right populists for peddling "fake news" about vaccine safety and stoking the climate of doubt.

Authorities in Morocco have arrested 13 men in the murders of two Scandinavian women, which appears to have been "revenge" for US-backed forces in Syria defeating the so-called Islamic State in the town of Hajin.  At least four of the suspects are believed to be members of IS and nine were allegedly carrying weapons and explosives.  The bodies of 28-year-old Norwegian Maren Ueland and 24-year old Danish student Louisa Vesterager Jespersen were flown back to Copenhagen.  They attended university in southern Norway, and were on a camping holiday in the Atlas Mountains outside Casablanca.  Authorities say there is no reason to doubt the veracity of an IS propaganda video showing the suspects murdering the women.

One of the suspects in the 2015 Charlie Hebdo terrorist attack in Paris has been captured in Djibouti.  Peter Cherif - also known as Abou Hamza - will be sent back to France for questioning and probably charges over allegedly masterminding the shootings at the satirical magazine in which 20 died.  The gunman died days after the attack, hunted down and killed by police.  All three were born in France and were petty criminals before being recruited in jail into Islamist terrorism.

The US government is probably heading towards a shutdown, because Trump won't sign a funding bill unless it contains US$5 Billion for the wall he wants to build on the Mexican border - yeah, the one he claimed Mexico would pay for.