Should Schapelle Corby profit from her release from an Indonesian prison where she spent a decade for drug smuggling? – Polio returns to the Afghan capital – A journalist will not recover from injuries sustained in a raucous protest – All that, plus Chopin and Gas Masks in your CareerSpot World News Briefs.

Afghan health officials are on high alert after a 3-year old girl was diagnosed with polio.  The health ministry ordered a vaccination campaign across the capital.  The first diagnosis of polio in 2014 is troubling to health officials because they’ve been making great strides in eradicating the disease; and it occurred in a very poor community of former shepherds who’ve only recently who’ve given up their herds and come into the city to live.

The news cameraman who was hurt during last week’s protests against public transportation fare hikes in Rio de Janeiro is clinically brain dead, according to the Folha de S.Paulo newspaper.  Santiago Andrade hit in the head with an explosive and suffered a head wound.  A young protester was arrested over the weekend, after being caught on video passing the flare that struck Andrade to another man just before the incident.

A draft resolution that would force all parties in the Syrian Civil War to allow access for humanitarian organizations fell apart when Russia and China failed to attend a hearing in the Security Council.  Russia claimed the resolution would have no effect, and China claimed it might derail the peace talks going on in Geneva.

Anti-government demonstrations spread out of Sarajevo and into other cities in Bosnia.  Demonstrators say the government is self-serving and corrupt, and has failed to curb high unemployment.  Unlike last week’s riot, these demonstrations passed without serious violence.

A surreal scene in Kiev as protesters and cops maintained their lines in Independence Square – Music by The Beatles and Chopin floated over the tension as 2004 Eurovision Song Contest winner Ruslana Lyzhychko and other activists took to a piano perched on a barricade between each force. “The piano has become the symbol of the revolution, of peaceful resistance,” said Markiyan Matsekh, an activist who initiated the musical campaign.

French President Francois Hollande enjoyed a state dinner at the White House on Monday night, likely glad to be out of France and away from his low approval ratings.  US President Barack Obama took him on a tour of founding father Thomas Jefferson’s famed Monticello, and declared a high point in US-French relations.  Hollande’s long-time partner Valerie Trierweiler did not travel with him, after the breakdown in their relationship following accusations he had had affair.

A former US Navy sailor has been sentenced to 30 years in prison for attempted espionage.  40-year old Robert Hoffman had passed classified information about tracking naval vessels off to people he believed were Russian spies – but they weren’t, they were undercover investigators. 

Worst.  Instructor.  EVER.  A group of Sunni militants attending a suicide bombing training class at a camp north of Baghdad were killed when their commander conducted a demonstration with a belt, but apparently didn’t realize it was packed with explosives.  22 would-be suicide bombers and their teacher won’t get the chance to kill innocent people.  The militants were part of the “Islamic State In Iraq & Syria” (ISIS), the jihadist group so crazy that even al Qaeda wants nothing to do with them.

Schapelle Corby woke up outside prison for the first time in a decade.  After serving time for drug charges in Indonesia she was finally released on Monday, and headed straight for a luxury spa in Bali.  She can afford it.  The Seven Network reportedly paid A$2 Million (crikey!) for an interview with Corby, and that didn’t sit well with Sunrise co-host David Koch.