Good Morning Australia!! - Hillary picks the wrong day to feel ill - South Korea threatens the nuclear North - Child soldiers are put on the road back to home - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Hillary Clinton exited a 9/11 remembrance ceremony early, and was caught on video stumbling before getting into her motorcade - before emerging back into the public eye a very short while later looking fit and happy, smiling and waving at reporters.  Her campaign said she felt "overheated" at the gathering at Ground Zero in New York City, went back to her daughter Chelsea's apartment to rest up for a bit before hitting the campaign trial again.  Unfortunately, it feeds the conspiracy theory floated by the ultra-right and fascist demagogue Donald Trump's campaign that Ms. Clinton's health is a serious issue.  By Sunday afternoon, the 68-year-old Clinton was already facing calls to release her full medical records - something that her weak, flabby, junk-food-gobbling, orange-painted and 70-year-old opponent has thus far refused to do.

South Korea has a plan to annihilate the North Korean capital if it shows any signs of preparing a nuclear attack.  Pyongyang "will be completely destroyed by ballistic missiles and high-explosives shells" according to a military source quoted by Yonhap news.  This comes after Friday's test of a fifth nuclear device by North Korea, which is very publicly working to develop the capability to deliver a warhead on an intercontinental ballistic missile. 

Colombia's Marxist FARC rebels have released a first group of child soldiers as part of a peace accord signed with the government last month, which ends five decades of civil war.  The Red Cross says the eight children would be given mental and physical examinations before being housed and eventually reunited with their families.  The government and the FARC dispute the number of teens used as soldiers by the rebel group.

Clashes broke out in towns around southeastern Turkey after the government invoked the post-coup emergency rule to dismiss 28 democratically-elected mayors in predominantly Kurdish towns.  Many of the mayors are suspected to links to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).  Turkish cops used their favorite tools, tear gas and water cannons, to disperse hundreds of protesters.

Security forces in Kenya say they killed three women who attempted to attack a police station on Mombasa with knives and firebombs.  All were dressed in niqabs, and underneath which one of the women was wearing a suicide bomb that failed to detonate.  No group took responsibility, but the region's main terrorist group is Al Shabaab which has staged numerous attacks with high death tolls in recent years.

French police arrested a 15-year old boy they claim was preparing a terrorist attack over the weekend.  It came days after they say disrupted two planned attacks including one near Notre Dame cathedral in Paris, which say the arrest of three women.  Meanwhile, NSW police say the 22-year old arrested in a stabbing attack in a reserve in Minto over the weekend was inspired by Islamic State.  The victim, a 59-year old man, is in serious but stable condition in hospital.

Fiji authorities released five labor and opposition political figures who were taken in for questioning following an open forum on the island nation's constitution, which was imposed upon it by the military before the 2014 elections.  Police claimed they were investigating if any comments "could affect the safety and security of all Fijians".  Critics called it an appalling threat on free speech.