Hello Australia!! - Authorities release new information in the Stockholm attack - A once-feared terrorist group is heading into retirement - Trump's missiles give North Korea a talking point - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Police in Stockholm, Sweden are confident they've apprehended the person responsible for the deadly truck attack on a shopping street and department store in the capital city, disabling a "device" found inside the truck afterward.  The suspect is a 39-year old from Uzbekistan whom security forces considered to be a "minor character" prior to stealing a beer truck and killing four people and injuring ten more.  Police are not ruling out the possibility that the man in custody had help from co-conspirators.

French police recovered 3.5 tons of weapons and explosives after the Basque separatist group ETA provided the locations of its weapons stores.  ETA is rapidly aging itself out of existence as its 40-year campaign for a Basque homeland along the border of France and Spain no longer attracts support from younger generations.  During its peak, ETA organized itself in southwestern France but carried out most of its attacks in Spain.  While the French are encouraged by the weapons haul, Spain just wants the group to give up.  Critics say ETA was responsible for 800 deaths over its four decade run.

At least three people died in the collapse of a building in the southern Polish town of Swiebodzice.  Police believe it might have been caused by a gas explosion.  Four people have been rescued, but teams fear that more are beneath the rubble.

North Korea says Donald Trump's missile strike on Syria "proves a million times over" that it is right to build up its nuclear deterrent.  State-run media in Pyongyang labelled the launching of 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles at a Syrian air base an "intolerable act of aggression against a sovereign state".  The White House claims it was retaliating after government forces loyal to president Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons to attack its own people - the White House specifically cited the images of the small children killed and injured by the Sarin gas attack. 

But before last week, Donald Trump had twice tried to ban those children from entering the United states out of fear they might be terrorists; he also wasn't particularly outraged by the images of dead Syrian kids on beaches as their parents made failed attempts to flee the country to safety in the West.  Oh, and Donald Trump reportedly owns stock in Raytheon, the bigly yuuuuuuge US defense contractor that made the 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles that now have to be restocked for somewhere around US$95 Million of taxpayer money.  Even though war-loving conservatives insist the US no longer has the money for health care, education, or social security.

UK Foreign Minister Boris Johnson has called off a planned visit to Moscow in the wake of last week's chemical weapons attack.  "We deplore Russia's continued defence of the Assad regime," he said while noting that the priority now should be doing everything possible to bring about a "political settlement in Syria".  US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson will still visit Russia as planned after the G7 meeting on 10-11 April.

Police in Kenya can no longer impose random breathalyzer tests on motorists.  The three judge panel ruled in a case brought by a bar owner who complained a giant drunk driving dragnet was ruining his business and infringing on the rights of people to decide how to spend their evenings.  Kariuki Ruitha lost 80 percent of his business as cops grabbed up drivers as they walked out of his establishment, which the judges agreed was "oppressive and unreasonable".  Kenyan Cops can (and will) use those breathalyzers to test drivers who give them probable cause.  And lawmakers will take a crack at rewriting the breathalyzer law to conform to the ruling while doing something about the roads where thousands of people are killed every year.

Pearl Jam joined the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.