Hello, Australia!  We have video of a wild truck versus bus accident, a human pile-up at the running of the bulls, trouble at an Orange Order parade in Northern Ireland, and a lot more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Seven UN Peacekeepers were killed in the troubled Darfur region of Sudan.  The “unknown assailants” injured 17 more international troops in an attack.  It is the worst death toll in a single incident for UN peacekeepers in Darfur.  The nationalities of the murdered troops were not revealed, however the region was assigned to soldiers from Tanzania.

At least 18 people are dead after a gravel truck crashed into a crowded passenger bus in Moscow.  The whole thing was caught on those ubiquitous dash cams that so many Russian drivers have for their own protection.  Witnesses said the lorry was on the wrong side of the road, taking a turn entirely too fast, and was in the process of tipping over as it careened into the bus, which was ripped in half.  Moscow authorities have declared this Monday as a day of mourning for the victims.  Russian roads are notoriously lawless, with 25,000 people dying in crashes on them every year.

The train crash that killed six people south of Paris might have been caused by a faulty piece of metal.  Investigators say a metal bar connecting two rails had become detached prior to the light rail leaving the tracks and plowing through the Bretigny-sur-Orge station.  They’re also praising the driver for sounding an alarm immediately, which alerted oncoming train drivers to stop before slamming into the derailment.

Britain had to send in hundreds of police reinforcements after Protestants rioted in Belfast, Northern Ireland.  Two cops, one politician, and at least eight rioters were hurt.  Police are blaming the Orange Order for inciting the violence after it was barred from marching through a Catholic area of Northern Belfast.  Belfast MP and Protestant Orangeman Nigel Dodds went to the front lines to appeal to the crowd for calm, and for his trouble got a brick thrown at his head.  He was knocked unconscious and is recovering.

23 people were hurt, two of them gored, in Saturday’s penultimate Running of the Bulls in Pamplona, Spain.  The worst of it came at the entrance to the Plaza de Toros de Pamplona bullfighting stadium, when people tripped and fell at the mouth of the stadium, causing a human traffic jam that the enormous, horned beasts then jammed in to.  Several of the injured suffered crush injuries from being at the bottom of the pile, and stopped breathing.

300,000 people were evacuated from their homes in China in the path of Typhoon Soulik.  At least one person is dead and seven are hurt after Soulik’s first landfall in Taiwan.  It then moved on to the Chinese mainland, packing windspeeds of 118 kilometers per hour.

China cancelled plans to build its largest uranium processing plant in a southern city of Heshan.  This came a day after hundreds of anti-nuclear protesters took to the streets demanding the project be scrapped.  A government website acknowledged the opposition in announcing the cancellation.