Good Morning Australia! - Malcolm will discuss a new plan to control terrorists - America's gun control problem played a deadly role in the Paris terrorist Attacks - A senior Thai official has fled the junta and is seeking asylum in Oz - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull will meet with state and territory leaders today, and push them to pass new laws to lock up terrorists indefinitely - much in the way that Australia deals with paedophiles.  The plan would give the power to indefinitely detain a terrorist to state and territory Supreme Courts.  Supporters point to the Charlie Hebdo attack in Paris, noting that the suspects did jail time before the attacks, became radicalized in prison, and came out to commit horrific acts.  They also say such radicalization is going on in Australian prisons.

The hunt for the Paris Terrorism suspects has moved to Geneva, Switzerland, where police raised alert level.  Most of the suspects blew themselves up during the 13 November attacks in the French capital that killed 130 people, but Salah Abdeslam and Mohammed Abrini are still on the run.  Geneva police say they received information on four people and are taking action to "locate and arrest these individuals".

One of the guns used in the 13 November Paris attacks came from America.  Zastava arms of Serbia traced the serial number of the M92 pistol - the so-called "short AK 47" - and found that the company exported it to a legal US online gun dealer in May 2013.  How it got to Paris isn't clear, but terrorist groups tell members to buy guns in the US because of the country's ridiculously lax gun control laws.

The head Afghanistan's intelligence service has resigned blaming "pressures from President Ashraf Ghani".  This comes just after Taliban terrorists killed at least 50 people in an attack at Kandahar airport.  Rahmatullah Nabil and the president clashed over the role that neighboring Pakistan should play in helping defeat the Taliban:  President Ghani tried to engage Islamabad as an intermediary, while Mr. Nabil accused Pakistan of "harboring and supporting terrorism".

A senior Thai police official is seeking political asylum in Australia.  Police Major General Paween Pongsirin was investigating human trafficking of Rohingya Muslims from neighboring Myanmar, and mass graves of migrants found in the south of Thailand, but the military and his own higher-ups repeatedly obstructed the probe.  "There are good soldiers but the police and the military are involved in running the human trafficking," the General said, as reported by the ABC.  "Unfortunately the bad police and the bad military are the ones that have power."

A former US diplomatic worker pleaded guilty to cyberstalking and blackmailing aspiring models and sorority members at US colleges and universities.  36-year old Michael Ford worked at the embassy in London.  But he also hacked into young women's email, obtained sexually explicit images, and blackmailed the women into sending even more material.  he could be sentenced to decades in prison and fined hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Mauricio Macri has been sworn in as Argentina's president, vowing to unite the nation and revive the economy.  The conservative Macri took the oath of office in Congress but his inauguration was boycotted by his predecessor, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner (CFK), in a row over the venue.  "As president I want to be a citizen who can communicate with all Argentines," he said, and then indirectly referred to CFK:  "Politics for me is not a competition to see who's got the bigger ego.  It's working together for the good of the people."  CFK slammed Macri in the same manner on the way out yesterday, and urged her supporters to take to the streets if they feel betrayed by the new president.