Good Morning Australia!! - Erdogan threatens Europe - Brazil's leader thinks he hears ghosts - A landslide of garbage kills dozens - And more in your CareerSpot Global News:

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is heating up his tensions with his European neighbors, claiming that "nazism is alive in the West" and that the Dutch would "pay the price" for stopping two of his ministers from attending a campaign rally in the country.  Erdogan is counting on a big turnout from Turks living abroad to vote in the 16 April referendum on granting him even more autocratic powers; he has made similar accusations against Germany for cancelling rallies for Turkish ex-pats.  "We can never do business under those sorts of threats and blackmail," said Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, "We drew a red line," referring to the expulsion of a Turkish minister.  Rutte could conceivably boost his reelection chances by standing up to Erdogan, thus fending off a challenge from the extreme right candidate and famous xenophobe Geert Wilders - who is promising to "de-Islamize" the Netherlands.

Europe is not putting up with the demagoguery that Erdogan used to consolidate power in Turkey:  French presidential front-runner Emmanuel Macron "strongly condemns" what he calls provocations from the Turkish government.  Denmark's prime minister is postponing a visit by his Turkish counterpart because of "tensions" between Ankara and the Netherlands.  German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said today it was difficult to continue working with Turkey on economic aid because of the row.

A landslide at a rubbish dump in Ethiopia killed at least 48 people, and dozens of people are still missing.  The area had been used as the capital Addis Ababa's dump for 50 years, and authorities recently overruled local concerns and allowed trucks to resume dumping waste on the top of the trash mountain.  Many of the capital's poorest lived in shanties alongside the dump where they made their livings picking through the waste.

A runaway bus veered into crowd in the Haitian city of Gonaives, killing at least 34 people.  The bus driver was apparently trying to flee a smaller wreck when the vehicle plowed into Rara Parade of street musicians and dancers.  And then it got worse:  "The people who were not victims of the accident tried to burn the bus with the passengers inside," said Faustin Joseph of the local civil defense, which whisked the driver and passengers away to protective custody.

Mexico's Popocatepetl volcano goes boom.

South Korea's impeached former president Park Geun-hye has left the Blue House official residence and moved back into her own residence in Seoul's southern Samseong district.  "Although it will take time, I believe the truth will certainly come out," she said to supporters on the way out, apologizing for "failing to fulfill my duty as president".  She could now face prosecution for a massive influence peddling scheme that has cost her job and enveloped the country's biggest corporations.

Brazil's un-elected president Michel Temer stunned observers by moving out of the official residence, complaining of "ghosts".  The 76-year old Temer said, "I felt something strange there.  I wasn't able to sleep right from the first night.  The energy wasn't good," explaining why he took his 33-year old wife and their young son from the the Palacio da Alvarado to the vice president's official residence.  Both were designed by the great modernist architect Oscar Neimeyer.  Temer was appointed president last year when democratically-elected President Dilma Rousseff was impeached for accounting practices that aren't illegal - Temer was already facing campaign finance charges and is implicated in the pay-to-play scandal involving the national oil company Petrobras and the construction giant Odebrecht.  So, maybe they're Dickensian ghosts...

Irish PM Enda Kenny says he will push Donald Trump to guarantee the safety of thousands of Irish undocumented workers in the US.  The Taoiseach is on his annual St. Patrick's Day visit to the US, and will go to the White House later in the week to advocate for the "hard-working, tax-paying Irish people in the United States who for too long now have been living in the shadows".  Under the Trump administration, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have been on a rampage, seeking out and deporting undocumented Latinos - breaking up families as teens, parents, grandparents are jailed and sent away.

An al Qaida affiliated group is claiming responsibility for twin bombings near holy shrines frequented by Shiites in the Syrian capital Damascus that killed at least 40 people. 

Aging terrorist Carlos the Jackal is set to go on trial in Paris for a 1974 attack on a shopping arcade in the Latin Quarter.  Now 67-years old and serving two life sentences for other murders and attacks he took part in on behalf of the Palestinian cause or Communist revolution, Ilich Ramirez Sanchez hadn't yet earned his nickname when he allegedly tossed a grenade which killed two people.  Yep, two people - not like today's atrocities which regular claim dozens.  Once the world's most-feared terrorist, Ramirez Sanchez says he knows nothing of the attack - even though an Arab-language newspaper published an interview with a person claiming to be C-the-J a few years later containing rather specific details.