Hello Australia!! - Democracy undoes a strongman dictator - Former US troops join an environmental protest - Why is Trump afraid of an election recount? - Seconds from death and caught on video - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Baby Tiger Cubs!  Baby Tiger Cubs!  At the Milwaukee County Zoo in the northern US.

The lady in the orange at the right side of the video barely manages to avoid getting run down as two vehicles crash in Kalisz, Poland.

Well, that was unexpected:  Gambia's authoritarian President Yahya Jammeh says he will respect the results of the West African country's election, step down, and assist the first new president in 22 years transition to the job.  Mr. Jammeh got just over 36 percent in Thursday's election, losing to real estate developer Adama Barrow's 45 percent.  Jammeh took power in 1994 in a bloodless coup d'etat, and has wielded an iron fist ever since.

US Republicans are trying to stop election recounts in three states that were brought on by the Green Party.  Michigan's Republican Attorney General Bill Schuette filed a motion in the state Supreme Court to block the recount, claiming it could cost taxpayers millions of dollars.  Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein questioned why Trump was "afraid" of a recount; she's seeking recounts in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania.  Trump lost the popular vote to Democrat Hillary Clinton by more than 2,000,000 ballots, but won the presidency because of gross inequities in the US electoral college system.

Hundreds of US military veterans have joined the indigenous and environmentalist protesters at the Standing Rock Sioux reservation in North Dakota, trying to stop a loathed oil pipeline project, the current part of which runs over sacred burial sites and can potentially contaminate Standing Rock's only water source.  The organizer of the veterans was disgusted by videos showing cops and private security goons beating peaceful, unarmed protesters:  "If the cops there want to be state sanctioned agents to brutally beat non-violent veterans, that have served their country honorably - if there going to beat us - then that should be the signal to the rest of the world of what our country's doing," said former Marine Mike Wood, Jr.  The US Army Corps of engineers and the county sheriff have ordered the activists to leave by Monday.

A massive protest of 200,000 conservative Muslims against the Christian governor of Jakarta came and went without incident, mostly because Indonesian pre-arrested several people on treason charges.  The protesters allege Governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama - known by the single name Ahok - insulted Islam, and prosecutors say a blasphemy case could make it to trial.  The controversy has dinged Ahok's popularity before the February elections, but he maintains a strong constituency based on his support of public transportation and criticism for official corruption.

European police are warning that militants from so-called Islamic State (IS) will respond to mounting losses in the Mideast with increased attacks in Europe.  "It is important that we have a concerted European response to deal with the threat," said Europol director Rob Wainwright.  The agency's report says this could include car bombs, kidnappings and extortion - but plays down strikes against infrastructure and nuclear facilities. 

A sign stolen from the site of the Dachau concentration camp in southern Germany more than two years ago has apparently been found, hundreds of kilometers away.  Bavarian police said, "Due to an anonymous tipoff, police in Norway's Bergen have secured an iron gate with the well-known text" that reads "Arbeit macht frei" or "Work will set you free".  The grim and ominous message greeted thousands of Jews and others who were sent to the camps in nazi Germany; more than 41,000 were murdered before US troops liberated it on 29 April 1945.  A similar theft occurred at Auschwitz in 2009; Swedish neonazis were responsible.