Hello Australia!! - A mysterious medical problem is stopping one Stone from Rolling - Thousands march on Gaza's barrier - Voters might replace a chocolate maker with a comedian - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

The Rolling Stones have abruptly postponed their North American tour because doctors advised 75-year old lead singer Mick Jagger to dealwith an unspecified medical issue.  "I really hate letting you down like this," Jagger said on social media.  "I'm devastated for having to postpone the tour but I will be working very hard to be back on stage as soon as I can."  The band's publicist said Jagger was "expected to make a complete recovery".  A lot of people already bought tickets to the shows, which they are being advised to hold on to as they will still be valid at the rescheduled concerts.

At least three people have been killed and hundreds wounded in the anniversary of the Gaza "Great March of Return" protests.  Israeli forces on the outside of the heavily fortified perimeter on Saturday used live rounds, rubber bullets, and tear gas on the protesters. Two of the dead were 17 year old boys, according to Gaza's health ministry.  Protesters organized by Hamas are demanding the right to return to lands from which their families were ousted during the founding of Israel in 1948, as well as and end to Israel's and Egypt's 12-year blockade of Gaza.

Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko says he will accept the result of Sunday's presidential vote, "whoever wins".  The election is a major test of Ukraine's post-revolution democracy.  Poroshenko is polling in third place with 12.9 percent, barely trailing perennial candidate Yulia Tymoshenko with about 13 percent.  But leading the pack is comedian and political novice Volodymyr Zelensky with 20.6 percent - his major experience is playing the president on TV.

Thailand's election is still up in the air, and the hoped-for orderly transition from military junta to elected opposition is looking less likely.  The coup government is blaming a software error with the voting machines for the chaos.  In a reversal from earlier polls, the pro-military appears to have won the popular vote, but the opposition parties are announced they would unite to form a pro-democracy coalition and thus create a majority in the lower house.  Meanwhile, King Maha Vajiralongkorn has stripped fugitive former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra of his royal decorations, reasoning that his 2008 flight to escape serving a two-year prison term is a conflict of interest.

Brunei isn't backing down from instituting draconian Sharia Law in the country, making sodomy, adultery, and rape punishable with the death penalty - that includes death by stoning.  The new law will also call for amputation for thieves.  The decision is heavily criticized in the West, and actor George Clooney is organizing a boycott of Brunei's international luxury hotel holdings. 

A judge in Brazil is blocking far-right President Jair Bolsonaro's planned celebration of the 1964 fascist coup, after which thousands were murdered by the US-backed military junta for their political activities.  Judge Ivani Silva da Luz said the event celebrating the 55th anniversary of the coup was not "compatible with the process of democratic reconstruction".