Hello Australia!! - The mid-air asylum drama that temporarily rescued a QLD family - Colombia's historic peace deal comes apart - Kiwis move to protect Bottle-Nosed Dolphins from.. us? - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

The Measles have come roaring back into four European countries where the disease had been eradicated.  And the UN World Health Organization says it's mostly because of conspiracy-theorist misinformation and anti-vaxxers that Measles - a highly contagious and potentially fatal disease easily controlled with two vaccinations - is back in Albania, the Czech Republic, Greece, and the UK.  "We are backsliding, we are on the wrong track," said WHO's Dr. Kate O'Brien, who is calling on social media companies and community leaders to provide "accurate, valid, scientifically credible information".  The Democratic Republic of Congo, Madagascar, and Ukraine are combating the largest Measles outbreaks out there right now.

Also, Auckland, NZ has a Measles outbreak.

Melbourne judge granted a last-minute, mid-air reprieve to a Tamil family, halting the deportation of the asylum-seeking parents and their two very young Australian-born daughters.  The family fears they would be in imminent if they are returned to Sri Lanka, where persecution of the Tamil minority has caused increasing concern.  Supporters say Border agents might have harmed the mother's arm during the struggle to get them out of their home in central Queensland, and onto the plane at Melbourne last night.  The judge's order to halt the deportation came in after the plane took off, and the family deplaned when it set-down in Darwin for refueling.  The family is still in legal jeopardy as the High Court already rejected their last plea for asylum in May.  

The UK opposition has launched several efforts to stop Prime Minister Boris Johnson from suspending Parliament to ram through the Brexit with as little discussions as possible.  Mass protests are scheduled for this weekend; on Tuesday, we'll see if Labour's Jeremy Corbyn is able to work with dissident Tories, Lib-Dems, and the minor parties to put together a majority to stop Johnson, who insists the Brexit must happen on 31 October even if there is no deal to ease the expected economic chaos.  

Former FARC rebel leader Ivan Marquez is calling on the Colombian Marxist group to take up arms again, three years after agreeing to a landmark peace deal.  The problem is that the government changed and swung to the right since the deal was reached, and the Marquez faction accuses the new far-right  regime of President Ivan Duque of reneging on several key parts of the agreement.  This is potentially trouble for Colombia, because as many as 2,300 former FARC rebels have refused to give up their weapons.

Bolivian President Evo Morales joined firies for another day on the front lines of a wildfire in the Tucavaca Valley Municipal Reserve.  He has actually suspended his re-election campaign during the national emergency, which has seen 1.2 million hectares of bush burned this year.  A Boeing super tanker jet is performing water drops to help fight this fire, and Bolivia is accepting international aid.  Evo called an emergency meeting for Friday if the eight countries that make up the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization (ACTO) to talk about a coordinated response to the wildfires.

Meanwhile, environmentalists are blasting Brazil's 60-day ban on land clearing fires as cynical and really not enough to help fight the wildfires in Brazil's Amazon Rainforest.  "The people who burn without a license are not going to obey," said Rodrigo Junqueira of the Socio-Environmental Institute.  Plant ecologist Xiangming Xiao of the University of Oklahoma said it "will be very challenging to identify and separate" which fires were set illegally, and which were approved for land clearing.  Critics also point out that the ranchers, big farmers, and mining companies accused of setting the illegal fires are usually the political allies of far-right president Jair Bolsonaro, who has frequently said he wants to clear the rainforest for development.

New Zealand is banning tourists from swimming with bottle-nosed dolphins, as apparently the creatures find it off-putting.  New research shows people have been "loving the dolphins too much", and the number of dolphins frequently visiting the North Island's "Bay of Islands" has dropped by 66 percent since 1999.  Only 19 human-loving dolphins are frequent visitors.