Hello Australia!! - Big Changes or more stagnation in Spain? - Young women are killed for walking near contentious borders - Al-Sisi consolidates power - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Spain administered the oath of office to its new Prime Minister, 46-year-old former economics professor and Socialist leader Pedro Sanchez, who toppled conservative Mariano Rajoy in a historic no-confidence vote a day earlier.  Now partnered with the anti-austerity Podemos as well as Basque and Catalan nationalist parties, Sanchez says he will focus on "pressing social needs" of citizens in the country still plagued by high unemployment and racked with the devastating and occasionally deadly aftertaste of austerity.  But the parliament is still as fragmented as it was a week ago, and all of the political roadblocks that bogged down Rajoy are waiting for Sanchez.

The US has still not provided any answers to the family of 20-year old Claudia Gomez Gonzalez, an ethnic Mayan from Guatemala who was shot and killed by the US Border patrol for by a US Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) agent in Rio Bravo, Texas a little over a week ago.  Her body has been returned to Guatemala, where it took an additional seven hours to get the casket to her home vilalge from Guatemala City.  Barely five feet tall and a forensic accountant by training, she sought to continue her education in America.  Instead, she was killed by a border patrol agent who claimed he was being attacked with a piece of dimensional lumber - no such weapon was found in the vicinity of the killing.  The US Border Patrol has paid out more than US$9 Million in recent years to settle excessive force claims.

Thousands attended the funeral in Gaza for 21-year old Palestinian nurse Razan al-Najar, who was gunned down by an Israeli military sniper on Friday when she ran towards the border with Israel.  The Palestinian Medical Relief Society said she had been trying to reach an injured protester taking part in the protests of Palestinians demanding the right to return to their ancestral homes that are now part of Israel.  Although those protests peaked a couple of weeks ago, the border situation is still tense and violent.  The UN and Human rights groups have condemned the use of disproportionate forces by Israel, which says it will investigate Ms. Najar's killing.

Egyptian President Abdel Fatah al-Sisi was sworn in for another term while simultaneously clamping down on dissent.  "Egypt can fit us all with all our differences," he said as authorities performed wave after wave of arrests, "Accepting others and creating common ground will be important for us in order to create political development."  Sisi won more than 97 percent of votes in the March election, which was criticized as a farce for being stage managed and stripped of any real competition.