Good Morning, Australia! – We’ve got the greatest video you’re going to see all week, and it's got a dorsal fin – A growing spy scandal in South Korea – And it took 70 years for a Japanese company to take responsibility for its actions during World War II – You might have missed a real bargain if you wre in the market for an entire international airport – And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Champion Aussie surfer Mick Fanning amazingly was not hurt in a shark attack that happened on live TV.  He was on his board, paddling in Jeffreys Bay in South Africa for the World Surf League’s J-Bay Open.  All of a sudden the dorsal fin pops up out of the water, and Mick is fighting for his life.  “I was just sitting there, I was just about to start moving, and then I felt something grab, just get stuck in my leg rope,” he said.  “I instantly just jumped away, and then it just kept coming at my board.  I was kicking and screaming.”  No shrinking violet, he says he punched the shark to make it go away.  After Mick was plucked out of the water, the World Surf League wisely canceled the rest of the day’s competition.

There are new questions about the role of South Korea’s intelligence agency, after the suicide of one of its agents.  The 46-year old left a note explaining how he had eavesdropped on private citizens with spyware and mobile phone taps, before he killed himself in his car via carbon monoxide poisoning.  Last week, the spy agency admitted it had purchased spyware from the Italian company “Hacking Team”, but claimed it was only for foreign targets.  Internal memos uploaded by Wikileaks showed that Australia was also a client of “Hacking Team”.

At least five people are dead in a building collapse in the Indian capital New Delhi.  “The body of the small girl was pulled out from the debris,” said police commissioner Dependra Pathak,  “We’ve got our fingers crossed and hope there are no more bodies in the debris.”  The residential area is known for shoddy construction and corrupt building inspections.  “These buildings are really old and built by local, unqualified guys without any proper checks,” Pathak said.

Banks in Greece are finally going to reopen today, although there will still be limits on cash withdrawals.  German Chancellor Angela Merkel is calling for swift aid talks so Athens could also lift withdrawal limits, which have changed from 60 Euros a day to 420 Euros a week – in other words, if someone can’t get to the bank on Monday for 60 Euros, that person can withdraw 120 or more on Tuesday.  “That’s not a normal life so we have to negotiate quickly,” Merkel said.

More than 43 people are dead in heavy shelling in Yemen’s port city Aden, where Houthi militias and what is left of government troops are fighting for control.  A Houthi rebel leader denied bombarding the district, but Yemeni medics said the shelling came from the rebel-held areas.

70 years after the end of World War II, Japan’s Mitsubishi Corporation has apologized for using Allied prisoners of war as forced labor.  It’s believed to be the first such apology ever issued by a Japanese corporation.  At the ceremony at the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles, senior executive Hikaru Kimura expressed remorse that prisoners had been put to work in mines operated by the firm.  Only a few of the survivors are still alive, and a few were on hand to accept the apology.  “We hope this will spur other companies to join in and do the same,” said the Wiesenthal Center’s Rabbi Abraham Cooper.

Spain’s “ghost airport” has finally sold – for 10,000 Euros.  Yeah, that’s a bargain.  Ciudad Real Airport is more than 200 kilometers south of Madrid, and cost more than a billion Euros.  But it opened in 2008 right before the economic collapse, and never really got off the ground.  Or couldn’t get things to land on the ground?  Something like that.  Lying dormant for years – save for that time that Top Gear rented it to race supercars – the new owners hope to use it as a portal for European and Chinese investment.