Good Morning Australia!  We have scary extraditions, new revelations about spying in China, secret trainings of Syrian rebels, and links to terrifying video of deadly crashes at Le Mans and a Middle American air show.  These are your World News Briefs:

Top-level talks are going on between Canberra and Peru before six Australians are placed on Interpol’s Most Wanted list for the alleged murder of a hotel doorman.  Police had initially concluded that Lino Rodriguez Vilchez committed suicide at the Lima hotel where the “Peru Six” were staying, and allowed the group to leave.  Months later, cops changed their minds and absentia pre-trial hearings commenced.  The six say they will not return to Peru before 1 July, the deadline imposed by a judge before he asks Interpol for the warrants.

A fugitive convicted killer from Britain has been nabbed in Queensland’s Sunshine Coast.  In the late 1970s, Simon Hennessey was convicted of stabbing his aunt to death.  He served 20 years of a life sentence before disappearing from the UK.  Fast-forward to this month in Maroochydore, where cops arrested Hennessey, now 49-years old, in an elborate credit card scam.  British cops are working on extradition papers.

The US decision to charge whistle-blower Edward Snowden with Espionage is galvanizing civic groups in Hong Kong to oppose his extradition.  Hong Kong has a separate legal system from the rest of China, but its true autonomy from Beijing has been in doubt.  Snowden has reportedly moved into a private home in Hong Kong and has legal advisors.  Julian Assange calls the charges “intimidation”.

Snowden says his former employers in the US National Security Agency (NSA) targeted Tsinghua University in Beijing for extensive hacking attacks.  Tsinghua is widely regarded as the mainland’s top education and research institute, and home to one of China’s major networks where data from millions of Chinese citizens could be mined.

The “Friends of Syria” meeting in Doha might be more accurately titled the “Friends of Syrian Rebels”.  All 11 foreign ministers from member nations have agreed to provide urgent support to forces who are fighting to topple President Bashar al-Assad. Its joint statement said the members had agreed to "provide urgently all necessary materiel and equipment to the opposition on the ground, each country in its own way in order to enable them to counter brutal attacks by the regime and its allies".

The CIA And US Military have been covertly training the Syrian rebels with anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons for months before the Obama administration made its formal announcement about plans to arm them.  The trainings have been going on in Turkey and Jordan since 2012, and have made the US more dependent on its relationship with Turkey, even as pro-Democracy protesters object to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Islamic authoritarianism.

Danish driver Allan Simonsen died after a crash at the 24 hour “Le Mans” auto race in France.  It’s the first driver fatality at the high-speed endurance event since 1997.  The 34-year-old Simonsen was taken to hospital after his Aston Martin No. 95 crashed about 10 minutes into the race.  It spun at high speed and skidded into the barrier at the Tertre Rouge corner where cars typically reach speeds of up to 170 kilometers per hour.

A pilot and a wing-walker performing an aerial stunt were both killed when their antique bi-plane crashed into the ground in front of horrified spectators at the Vectren Air Show at the Dayton, Ohio airport.  The wing-walker has been identified as Jane Wicker, a celebrity in the air show world for her highflying stunts.