Hello Australia!! - One Australian woman dies on Mount Everest, another becomes Oz's youngest to make the summit - New images show debris from EgyptAir Flight MS804 which crashed in the Mediterranean Sea - Greece might be halting the deal to stop refugees from flooding into Europe and returning them to Turkey - And more in your CareerSpot International News Briefs:

An Australian woman has died of apparent altitude sickness while descending Mount Everest.  The woman in her mid-30s had already reached the summit and was climbing down from Camp Four to Camp Three on Saturday afternoon, when she began to experience the classic symptoms of weakness and loss of energy.  A day earlier, a Dutch climber identified as 35-year old Eric Arnold died in his sleep in Camp Four after making the summit.  It's not all bad news up there, however - 19-year old Brisbane woman Alyssa Azar finally made it to the top of the world's highest peak, after her 2014 and 2015 attempts were scuttled by a deadly avalanche and the Nepal Earthquakes, respectively.

French investigators are confirming that automated reporting system the downed EgyptAir passenger plane indicated smoke in several areas of the aircraft before it crashed into the Mediterranean Sea last week.  The Airbus A320's ACARS (Aircraft Communications Addressing and Reporting System) indicated smoke in the lavatory and in the electronics below the cockpit, as well as sensors detecting problems with three windows, as first reported by the trade publication The Aviation Herald.  All of this happened within the three minutes preceding the point at which Flight MS804 dropped off of air traffic controllers' radar. 

Egypt released the first video of items retrieved from the Mediterranean Sea in the search for Flight MS804.  It appears to be small chunks of the fuselage and textiles from the interior, as well as unused inflatable life jackets and torn textiles, and some articles of the passengers' clothing.  Recovery teams also reportedly found body parts and luggage, but the main body of the plane and the two "black boxes" which show flight data and cockpit transmissions have not yet been located.  66 passengers and crew died in last week's crash of Egypt Air Flight MS804 from Paris to Cairo, and even though terrorism is suspected, investigators are far from determining the cause.

The US says Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansour is likely dead after an air strike in eastern Afghanistan near the Pakistan border.  The Pentagon cautions it is sill assessing the results of the strike.  This isn't the first time the US has targeted a leader of the Taliban - and if it doesn't pan out, it won't be the first time a Taliban leader's death had been reported prematurely.  Mansour assumed control of the Taliban last year following the confirmation of the death of long-time leader Mullah Omar, who actually died a few years earlier.

Islamic State is claiming responsibility for the murder of a homeopath in Bangladesh.  Machete-wielding assailants killed Mir Sanwar Rahman and seriously wounded his friend Mohammad Saifuzzaman.  Both men were followers of the mystic tradition of Baul music, which is seen as heretical by Muslim hard-liners.

A panel of judges in Greece is refusing to send a Syrian refugee back to Turkey, ruling that Turkey is not safe and cannot protect the migrant's basic human rights - including the rights to work, medical care, and family life.  That throws into doubt the entire deal reached between the European Union and Turkey to stop the flow of Middle Eastern war refugees and other migrants.  More than 400 migrants and refugees have already been sent back to Turkey under the deal.

The UN World Health Organization (WHO) says the same strain of the Zika virus that has caused so much trouble in Brazil has now appeared "on the doorstep of Africa", in the Cape Verde Islands.  Zika was first discovered in world in Africa in 1947.  But the strain in Brazil is associated with neurological disorders including thousands of babies being born with abnormally small brains and skulls, a condition called microcephaly.  So far in Cape Verde, 80 pregnant women are believed thought to have been infected and three babies have been born brain damaged with microcephaly.

Cyclone Roanu has inundated much of coastal Bangladesh, killing at least 24 people and routing half a million people from their homes.  Plenty of the ubiquitous power outages and landslides have been reported.  Sri Lanka is also still dealing with flooding after torrential rains last week.

Three people were killed in the latest blast from Indonesia's Mount Sinabung in North Sumatra.  The force of the eruption sent a column of ash and smoke three kilometers into the sky, and 4.5 kilometers down the slopes into regional rivers.

Costa Rica's Turrialba volcano also erupted, sending hundreds of people to hospital with breathing problems.  The stench of sulfur is said to be fierce around the capital San Jose.

And Mount Etna, in Italy.  Mount Etna, too.

A judge in Mexico approved the extradition of drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman to the US to face murder, smuggling, money laundering, and a host of other charges.  The move will be delayed for months for appeals, but he is highly unlikely to escape US custody after twice breaking out of Mexico's porous prisons.