Hello Australia!! - Two are rescued two days after the collapse of a Taiwan high-rise - Myanmar is reportedly considering allowing Aung San Suu Kyi to finally become president - Six are hurt when nature clashes with people in India - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Negotiations are reportedly underway that "could" result in Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi becoming President of Myanmar.  Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy Party won last November's election by a landslide, but an article in the constitution says people with foreign spouses and children cannot hold the executive office.  Suu Kyi's late husband was British.  Critics say the article was written as a poison pill to halt Suu Kyi's rise from political prisoner to president.  Two state different state television outlets say the negotiations would result in the lifting of Article 59(f). 

Haitian President Michel Martelly has stepped down with no successor taking office, leaving a caretaker government in his wake.  Last month's long-delayed elections were called off at the last moment amid fears of violence and the opposition's allegations of fraud.  The same reasons are cited for Haiti's cancellation of Carnival this year.  The next attempt at a presidential election will take place in late April, with the winner taking office in May.

Rescuers in Tainan City in southern Taiwan pulled a woman and another person out alive from the wreckage of the collapsed Weiguan Jinlong (Golden Dragon) building.  This comes more than 48 hours after a magnitude 6.4 earthquake hit the island.  The death toll is now 35 lives lost and more than 100 people are still considered missing.

At least six people are hurt after a leopard got onto the grounds of a school in the Indian tech city of Bangalore.  It's not clear if any children were mauled;  but scientist, a forestry employee, and a TV news camera operator were among those injured by the beast's claws and fangs.  So was this guy near the pool.  The male cat is estimated to be about eight years old, and pretty tough - it took a while for tranquilizers to take effect.  But once they put him to sleep, they took him out to a forest and released him.  Officials say there are as many as 14,000 leopards in India, and interactions with people are becoming more common as humans encroach on the leopards' habitats.

People in London got a scare when one of the city's iconic red double-decker bus exploded while crossing the Lambeth Bridge.  It turns out the mini-panic was for naught, because the exploding bus was a stunt for an upcoming Jackie Chan movie titled "The Foreigner".  Although city officials did announce the stunt beforehand, not everyone read about it.