Good Morning, Australia! – Malala Yousafzai’s attackers are sentenced – Nigeria rescues more women from Boko Haram – Disturbing reports about the mental state of one of the men executed alongside Andrew Chan and Muran – A Sea Lion pup in the big city – And a lot more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Pakistan sentenced ten men to life in prison for the shooting of education advocate Malala Yousafzai in 2012.  Their leader, the head of the Pakistani Taliban is believed to be hiding out in Afghanistan.  Malala was airlifted to the UK for treatment of a head wound, and went on to take her education campaign worldwide and secure a Nobel Prize.

Rescuers pulled a 15-year old boy out of the rubble of Kathmandu’s Hilton Hotel – battered and dehydrated, but alive.  They drilled through concrete for four hours before reaching Pema Lama, who was trapped in a box between slabs and debris for five days after the killer earthquake in Nepal.  The death toll is now more than 5,800 lives lost.  The United Nations says eight million people have been affected, with at least two million in need of tents, water, food and medicines over the next three months.

As more people are able to leave Nepal, more video is emerging of the moment the magnitude-7.8 temblor struck last weekend.

You can donate to help Nepal through these links:  UNICEF – The World Food Program – The Australian Red CrossOXFAM AustraliaMedicins Sans Frontieres Australia (Doctors Without Borders) – also, Charity Navigator helps you pick charities that are open and accountable. 

Nigeria’s army rescued another 60 women and 100 children from Boko Haram’s former stronghold in the Sambisa Forest.  Earlier, the military found 200 girls and 93 women in a different operation in the same forest.  However, none from that earlier group appear to be the Chibok Girls, the boarding school girls kidnapped en masse by the terrorists last year in an episode that sparked worldwide outrage.

Indonesian Ambassador to Australia Nadjib Riphat released a statement expressing his government’s sympathies to the families of Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran, the convicted ringleaders of a drug smuggling conspiracy who were executed in Indonesia this week.  “Indonesia understands the views expressed by the people and government of Australia on the law enforcement measures taken against the two Bali Nine drug smuggling ringleaders,” he wrote, “This is a difficult and challenging period for Australia-Indonesia relations.”

The Brazilian member of the Bali Nine executed in Indonesia along with Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran suffered from schizophrenia and was not aware he was going to be killed until moments before it happened.  Indonesia didn’t just ignore Tony Abbott and Julie Bishop, it also ignored Brazil’s pleas for clemency based on Rodrigo Gularte’s mental state.  Father Charlie Burrows, a local priest who accompanied Gularte in his final hours, said the man never understood the process and complained of hearing voices until the end.

An Australia grandmother could be sentenced to death by hanging if convicted of drugs charges in Malaysia.  A chemist’s report purportedly shows that a substance found inside the suitcase of Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto was methamphetamine.  Malaysia has a mandatory death sentence for anyone found guilty of carrying more than 50 grams of a prohibited drug, and Malaysia claims Mrs. Pinto Exposto was carrying 1.1 kilos.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has abruptly cancelled a planned visit to Russia for the 9 May Victory Day parade celebrating the 70th anniversary of the defeat of nazi Germany.  It would have been Kim’s first official foreign visit since taking power in 2011 following the death of his father. 

San Francisco animal control and police officers rescued an adorable Sea Lion pup who went exploring in city streets early Thursday morning.