Pope Francis is on the road – A rogue nurse might have spread Ebola to dozens of people – One of South Africa’s worst apartheid criminals wants out of prison – And a lot more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Pope Francis has arrived in South Korea for the first papal visit since 1989.  President Park Geun-hye greeted the pontiff at the airport.  Roman Catholicism is one of the fastest growing religions in South Korea, representing just over 10 percent of the population.  Francis will also attend Asian Youth Day, a festival for young Catholics from across the region.  And he’ll visit students who survived the Sewol ferry disaster that claimed more than 300 lives.

Nigeria is reporting a third Ebola death.  36-year old Jatto Asihu Abdulqudir was a protocol assistant traveling with Liberian-American businessman Patrick Sawyer, who brought the disease from Liberia on a passenger plane.  Sawyer died, as did a nurse who treated him.  But another nurse from that medical team and who may have Ebola broke quarantine in Lagos and went to home in the southeast, having contact with at least 20 other people.  Her actions threaten to spread the killer virus outside the current group, made up of people who had contact with Sawyer.

A former apartheid death squad leader so vile that he was nicknamed “Prime Evil” is trying to get out of prison.  Eugene de Kock became eligible for parole last month after 20 years in prison.  The government wants to put off any parole decision for a year, in consideration for the families of murder victims.  De Kock is suing, trying to get parole as soon as possible.  He was convicted of six murders, but as the leader of the “C1” counter-insurgency unit is believed to have committed more atrocities than anyone in pursuit of maintaining racist rule in South Africa.

Indonesian police say a Chicago teen and her boyfriend are refusing to cooperate with investigators in Bali after they were charged with killing the girl's mother.  62-year old Sheila von Wiese-Mack’s bloody body was found stuffed in a suitcase in the back of a taxi at the upscale St. Regis Hotel in Denpasar, hacked to death.  Back home in America, police say they’ve responded to 86 calls at the von Wiese-Mack home in Oak Park (if you’re into architecture, that’s where the largest cluster of Frank Lloyd Wright homes are located) for various combinations of domestic violence and theft.  Not to go too tabloid, but apparently friends warned the victim not to bring the daughter on vacation, describing 19-year old Heather Mack as a “vicious little monster” who hung out with the wrong crowd.

A German government watchdog group says blatant racism and homophobia are on the rise in the German-speaking sector of the Internet.  The annual report “Right-wing extremism online 2013” (“Rechtsextremismus online 2013”) says fascists, neo-nazi scum, and other rightwingers are increasingly targeting young people with hate propaganda.  The German hate groups get around local laws against extremist content by using the Russian social networking site VK, which has become known as a safe-haven for extremists.  The US microblogging and social networking site Tumblr is also condemned for doing very little to ban racist content.

Russia is sending a convoy of supposed aid trucks to a Ukrainian border crossing controlled by rebels.  That’s increasing worries that this isn’t an aid convoy at all, but the vanguard of a Russian invasion, or at the very least a convoy of weapons and fighters to join the pro-Moscow rebels in the Luhansk region.  Earlier, Moscow claimed the convoy would go to a border crossing under Kiev’s control, and the trucks would be inspected by the Red Cross to ensure the contents.