Hello Australia!! - Economic uprisings are recharged - Massacre on a military base in Russia - New twists in the investigation to 39 bodies found in a Truck in the UK - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Authorities hurriedly evacuated Chile's Congress as hundreds of protesters tried to force their way on to the building's grounds, while thousands and thousands more protested outside in Santiago and other cities.  Some reports say the Capital protest attracted more than a million marchers.  It shows authorities are still unable to get a handle on the protests against economic inequality even though conservative President Sebastian Pinera had already announced a series of concessions to quell the anger of the people.  People are joining the protests despite the lack of organization and visible leaders from the mainstream political parties.  Only 40 percent of Santiago's Metro was functioning on Friday as truck and public transport driver joined the general strike.  At least 19 people have died in protests.

And in Iraq, another wave of unrest over the economy has claimed 40 lives, while 2,000 people were wounded in protests across the country.  Iraq's leading clerics and the United Nations issued calls for restraint, but the protesters are demanding more jobs, better public services, and an end to corruption.

Russian officials say Private Ramil Shamsutdinov might have been suffering from mental health issues when he allegedly shot and killed two officers and six fellow troops at a military base in the Transbaikal region in the far east of the country.  Shootings, violence, and bullying plagued Russia's military during the lean, transformative years after the fall of the Soviet Union, but officials insist that has been cleaned up and such incidents are rare.

There are now four people under arrest in the deaths of 39 immigrants found in a refrigerated big-rig trailer in Essex, UK earlier this week.  Police in Northern Ireland picked up a 48-year old man, after a man and a woman, both aged 38, were arrested in Warrington, northern England.  The driver of the truck, a 25-year old man from Northern Ireland, was arrested on the day the bodies were discovered.  

Although Essex officials said the victims appears to be Chinese, at least three Vietnamese families say relatives might be among the dead.  One is feared to be 26-year old Pham Thi Tra My, who has not been heard from since she sent text messages to her family saying she could not breathe and apologized to them for dying.  Ms. Pham's brother told the BBC they paid more than AU$56,000 to smugglers to bring her to the UK.  The family lost track of her journey in Belgium, where the trailer had been before being shipped to Essex.

Investigators in Kenya say they have found the unmarked grave of Dedan Kimathi Waciuri, one of the country's greatest independence heroes.  Kimathi was one of the leaders of the Mau Mau Uprising in the 1950s.  But he was captured by the British occupiers, put on trial, and sentenced to death.  "I have committed no crime.  My only crime is that I am a Kenyan revolutionary who led a liberation army," he told his family before he was executed in 1957, "Now If I must leave you and my family I have nothing to regret about.  My blood will water the tree of Independence."  The colonizers dumped him in an unmarked grave in in Nairobi's Kamiti prison, but his legacy would influence other African anti-colonialists such as Nelson Mandela and Thomas Sankara.  Kenya wouldn't get its independence until late 1962 - since then, streets, schools, and a major university have been named in his honor, and a statue of Kimathi is a major feature of downtown Nairobi.

US Congressman and Civil Rights Hero Elijah Cummings was laid to rest in Baltimore, mourned by family and thousands of admirers.  Two former US Presidents eulogized him, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama who recalled Cummings as a "kind, strong, and honorable man".  Cummings died earlier in the week after a long illness.