Hello Australia!! - A dormant border war reignites with dozens killed - Palmyra's ancient ruins now sit aside evidence of another Islamic State atrocity - Pressure builds on South Africa's leader to step down - Gunned down on social media - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

The worst fighting in two decades in Nagorno-Karabakh claimed the lives of at least 30 soldiers and one civilian boy.  Officially part of Azerbaijan, the disputed territory in the Caucuses has been in the hands of Armenian separatists since the end of the civil war in 1994.  Both sides blame the the other for violence.  Armenia says 18 of its soldiers were killed and 35 are wounded.  Azerbaijan's military released a statement saying twelve of its troops had become "shahids" (martyrs) and one of its choppers was shot down.  Russian President Vladimir Putin urged both sides to cease firing and "show restraint", and the Russian Foreign Ministry is contacting both sides to cool the situation.

The Syrian Army in Palmyra says it found a mass grave of at least 42 bodies - pro-government civilians and soldiers captured and killed by Islamic State, which occupied the UNESCO World Heritage site for ten months until one week ago.  Children are among the victims, who were shot or beheaded.  IS is believed to have murdered 280 in Palmyra.

Lebanese security forces rescued 75 women from a horrific sex slavery ring, a malignancy the grew from the costly civil war next door.  Most of the women are Syrian refugees, all have been horribly abused, some showed signs of "mutilation".  Security forces arrested a dozen people running the human trafficking ring, including a doctor and a nurse.

Three officials with an Indian construction firm are charged with murder over the highway bridge that collapsed in Kolkata.  They face life in prison or even the capital punishment if convicted.  "The charges against the accused are conspiracy, attempt to murder, murder and mischief," said Kolkata chief public prosecutor Pijush Kanti Mondal.  Five other were detained for questioning.

Kenya held a memorial marking one year since the Garissa University attack, when four Al Shabaab gunmen massacred 148 people. 

A leading veteran of South Africa's ruling African National Congress party is calling on President Jacob Zuma to step down.  This comes after the country's highest court ruled that Zuma defied the constitution by using public funds to upgrade his private compound with a swimming pool and private theater.  "I know that if I were in the president's shoes, I would step down with immediate effect," said Ahmed Kathrada, who was tried and convicted alongside Nelson Mandela, and went to prison on Robbins Island with the future founder of modern South Africa. 

Tourists on a beach in Mauritius found what appears to be more debris from missing Malaysian Airlines Flight MH370.  It appears to be a chunk of the interior cabin from the Boeing 777 that disappeared a year ago with 239 people including several Aussies on board.

A small plane crashed onto car on a freeway outside San Diego, California, killing a 38-year old woman.  Another passenger in the car and both people in the plane are in hospital.

In Chicago, police are hunting suspects in the murder of a man who was shot down while live streaming on Facebook.  31-year old Brian Fields was sharing his visit to his old neighborhood on social media when all of a sudden shots rang out.  Cops say the shooting might be related to a killing a day earlier, but do not specify how, or if, Fields is connected.  Chicago's murder rate for the first three months of the year is up 76 percent from 2015, and shooting are up 88 percent.