Hello Australia!! - Italy's hospitality towards immigrants appears to be stretching thin - Criminal charges are filed in England's worst football disaster - You won't believe what a Japanese airline did to a disabled passenger - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Italy is threatening to close its ports to immigrant ships with foreign flags.  Rome has informed its European Union neighbors that it was reached the "saturation point" in dealing with the multitudes.  It's believed that more than 10,000 would-be immigrants set off from smuggling points in northern Africa in the past few days, and that's on top of the more than 70,000 Italy has accepted just this year - which is a 14 percent increase over the same period, 2016.  Europe's immigration commissioner Dimitri Avramopoulos says Italy's management of the immigration crisis over the past few years has been "exemplary" and is urging the EU to do more to assist Italy.

Almost three decades after the 1989 Hillsborough stadium crush that killed 96 people and injured 766, British prosecutors have finally filed criminal charges.  At the top of that list of six is former senior police officer David Duckenfield who was in charge of security at the football pitch in Sheffield, UK that day - he has been charged with the manslaughter by gross negligence in all but one of the deaths.  The disaster happened because Duckenfield ordered an extra door to be opened, routing thousands of football fans into an extremely narrow area with no way to escape.  But police avoided responsibility and, with the help of a Tory lawmaker and the tabloid press, planted false stories blaming the crush on fans from Liverpool, who were the primary victims of the crush.

The Petya/NotPetya global ransomware attack may have been a feint to cover-up the true attack on Ukraine.  Although an international law firm with an office in Australia was impacted, as was Maersk shipping, and a few other entities, the vast majority of victims are in Ukraine - banks, airports, critical infrastructure, hospitals.  And the email address shown on that screen that demands a US$300 ransom is already defunct, meaning the perpetrator or perpetrators aren't even bothering to collect their Bitcoins.  The blockchain wallet associated with the attack had received just $10,000 - a measly payout for a global attack.  Ukraine's IT infrastructure has been targeted over the past few years, and the attacks always seem to trace back to its former friend Russia.

Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has put the military on alert after yesterday's helicopter attack on government buildings in Caracas, which he is regarding as a coup attempt.  No one was hurt.  "I have activated the entire armed forces to defend the peace," Maduro said, "Sooner or later, we are going to capture that helicopter and those that carried out this terrorist attack."  Police and the military are searching for a former police detective identified as as 36-year-old Oscar Perez who, shortly before the attack, uploaded a video in which he and armed, masked pals called for an uprising against Maduro.

A Japanese airline is apologizing after workers forced a paraplegic man to abandon his wheelchair and crawl up a mobile staircase to board a plane.  This happened at the airport on Amami Island where Hideto Kijima pulled himself up to the Vanilla Air flight with his arms.  The cut-rate airline's parent ANA says a special chair will be made available to disabled travelers in the future.  Mr. Kijima is a travel blogger who says he has not run into anything like that in his visits to 200 airports in 158 countries.

Germany sent 220 Berlin police officers home in disgrace after they treated preparations for the upcoming G20 summit like a scene from "Animal House", or some recent movie that is more relevant to CareerSpot's young readership.  How about "Neighbors"?  Like that.  Anyway, instead of training to protect the leaders of the world's top 20 economies from widespread protest, the cops got drunk, danced on tables with guns, peed on fences en masse, and otherwise got under Dean Wermer's skin.  Fat, drunk, and stupid is no way to go through life, officer.  Germany is assigning 20,000 cops to protect the G20 in Hamburg on 7 and 8 July.  Provided they're sober.

Sorry we're late, Australia.  Computer blew up.  But then it got better.