Good Morning Australia!! - Powerful words from Samoa's PM to those who deny Climate Change - A former Human Rights icon faces international disgrace - How many nannies did Peter Dutton help? - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

The Prime Minister of Samoa came to Australia to call out those who deny the reality of Climate Change, and implore the new Australian government to stick with its commitments to the Paris Climate Accord.  "We all know the problem, we all know the solutions, and all that is left would be some political courage, some political guts, to tell people of your country there is a certainty of disaster," Samoan PM Tuilaepa Sailele said at the Lowy Institute in Sydney.  "So any leader of any country who believes that there is no climate change, I think he ought to be taken to mental confinement.  He is utterly stupid.  And I say the same thing to any leader here," he added.  Samoa and other Pacific Islands are under extreme threat from the rising seas and wild weather caused by Climate Change.  This comes as conservative members of the coalition press PM Scott Morrison to abandon Australia's promise to cut carbon emissions under the Paris agreement.

Federal Labor will investigate what is now two instances of Peter Dutton using the powers of his office to over rule the border force and allow European au pairs to stay in the country.  Both happened in 2015.  In the new case, Italian woman Michela Marchisio came to Oz on a tourist visa but planned to Russell Keag, who worked in the Queensland Police Department in the 1990s at the same time as Dutton, who swooped in and allowed Marchiso to stay for three months.  Earlier, it was revealed that Dutton performed the same service for a French woman who worked for a cousin of AFL chief Gillon McLachlan.  Dutton denies doing anything wrong.

There was a time was Aung San Suu Kyi was the world's poster child for Human Rights, facing down a repressive military regime for decades and eventually becoming the de facto leader of Myanmar.  But in a blistering final interview with the BBC, outgoing UN Human Rights chief Zeid Ra'ad al Hussein expressed his utter disappointment with her conduct amid what too many sources have confirmed was Myanmar's genocide and ethnic cleansing of its Rohingya Muslim minority:  "She was in a position to do something," lamented Mr. Hussein.  "There was no need for her to be the spokesperson of the Burmese military.  She didn't have to say this was an iceberg of misinformation or fabrication.  She could have just stayed quiet, or even better could have resigned."  Earlier this week, the Nobel Committee declined to revoke her Peace Prize, awarded in 1991 for her resistance to Myanmar's military rule.

The UN is calling on China to release what could be as many as a million Uighur Muslims being held without trial in reeducation camps far western Xinjiang province.  Beijing has not confirmed the existence of these camps, but has said that Xinjiang faces a threat from "extremism" and "terrorism". 

Trouble has returned to Chemnitz, Germany:  Far-right wingers demonstrated just across the street from where local officials were meeting with community groups to discuss violent anti-migrant rioting earlier in the week.  This crowd was much smaller and less violent than the earlier ruckus, and this time, police were more prepared to keep a lid on the lunacy.  But in Berlin, what was expected to be a small gathering of a hundred or so anti-racists turned into a demonstration of thousands condemning the xenophobes of Chemnitz.

At least three people are dead in violence in Soweto, South Africa where local mobs attacked shops owned by foreign nationals - apparently over rumors that some were selling out-of-date food.  Shop owners, mostly from other parts of Africa, sought shelter in police stations while critics say the authorities needed to roll out more quickly to avoid the death toll.