Hello Australia!! - Modi puts India opposite of Trump on the Paris deal - Philippine officials release video of the casino siege - One of the world's biggest rock festivals is back on after a terrorism scare - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi says his country will go "above and beyond" the Paris Climate Accord to combat global warming.  At an appearance in France with president Emmanuel Macron, Mr. Modi said, "The Paris agreement is the common heritage of the world.  It is a gift that this generation can give," and described the agreement as part of "our duty to protect Mother Earth".  He's got his work cut out for him - India is the world's fourth largest emitter of the greenhouse has CO2, behind the US, China, and Europe.  It's the latest in a line of high profile rebukes to orange clown Donald Trump, who pulled the US out of the Paris Agreement because European leaders wouldn't suck up to him during his first, disastrous international trip.

Philippine officials released video of the attack at the Resorts World Manila casino and hotel complex that killed 36 people and the gunman.  But despite claims of responsibility from the so-called Islamic State, Manila police chief Oscar Albayalde said the security footage revealed a clear motive:  The gunman went straight for a storage room in the back of the casino that contained poker chips.  The suspect was caught on CCTV, but has not been publicly identified.

Afghanistan's Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah survived a suicide bomb attack on a funeral procession in Kabul that killed seven people and injured at least 50 more.  This comes as capital residents are increasingly upset at the deteriorating security, and police had warned people to stay away from the funeral.  Other members of Afghanistan's elite class were at the funeral, which Mr. Abdullah says was targeted by three three bombers - no group has taken responsibility.

Germany's Rock am Ring festival is back on, and it looks like Friday's massive evacuation of 80,000 music fans might have been based on a false alarm.  Local police chief Wolfgang Fromm said officers found a person of "of non-German origin" backstage whom they feared had potential ties to terrorism.  After questioning this person and two companions, no terrorist threat was uncovered.  Zip.  Zinch.  Nada.  Bupkus.  The overreaction canceled the performance of Rammstein - now the way is clear for Jake Bugg and Prophets of Rage to perform tomorrow.  Because they're the ones I've heard of.

Brazil police arrested a close confidante of Brazil's president, accusing Rodrigo Rocha Loures of being the bag-man caught on video carrying a sack of hush money from a business leader.  Rocha could conceivably reach a deal with prosecutors by revealing the name of the person who was supposed to get that money.  Audio recordings already revealed discussions between that businessman and unelected President Michel Temer about paying money to a jailed former house speaker in exchange for his silence about corruption in Brazil's conservative government.

A Chilean judge sentenced more than a hundred intelligence officers of the old Pinochet dictatorship to prison for the kidnapping and murder of 16 leftist activists in 1974 and 1975.  The defendants got between 541 days and 20 years in prison, depending on their involvement.  Thousands of people were murdered when US-backed fascist dictator Augusto Pinochet eliminated Chile's 40-year old democracy in 1973, thousands more would be tortured or go into exile.