Good Morning, Australia! – Just when you think Boko Haram couldn’t go any lower – A bomb disrupts a rally in an eastern Ukraine city previously untouched by fighting – Greece reveals its hand – And a lot more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Four suspects have been arrested after a bomb killed two people at a rally in Kharkiv in eastern Ukraine.  Social media users uploaded images of shrapnel from the bomb and a body draped in the Ukraine flag.  It was one of several rallies held to mark a year since the Maidan uprising that ousted pro-Russian leader Viktor Yanukovych, and the others went well.  Kharkiv was the last place in Ukraine where Yanukovych was seen before fleeing to Russia, and has been free of the fighting as the rebels turned their attention south to Debeltseve and Mariupol.

Meanwhile, Ukraine and the Russian-backed rebels swapped prisoners as was called for in the most recent ceasefire agreement signed in Minsk.  And the government has finally begun pulling back heavy weaponry from the line of demarcation, while the rebels say they’ll start on Tuesday.  The process won’t be completed until 8 March, five days behind the timetable called for in the Minsk agreement.

Hundreds of Turkish troops entered Syria to evacuate soldiers guarding the tomb of Suleyman Shah, which Turkey considers a sovereign exclave.  The remains of the 13th century leader and grandfather of Ottoman Empire founder Osman I were moved to a site closer to the Turkish border.  Islamic State (IS) threatened to attack the historic site.

Boko Haram latest suicide bomber appeared to be an eight-year old girl to witnesses at a security checkpoint outside a market in the northeast Nigerian town of Potiskum.  The small child refused to be checked at the gate and set off the bomb, killing five people.  Boko Haram

Greece’s Left-wing Syriza government unveiled the reforms has unveiled the reforms it will present to the Eurozone on Monday to secure an extension of the bailout:  Cracking down on tax evaders, and streamlining the civil service.  Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis has said, “If the list of reforms is not agreed, this agreement is dead.”  Germany has insisted that Greece stick to the original terms of the bailout deal – including the austerity measures that shrunk the economy by 25 percent and caused 50 percent youth unemployment. 

At least 33 people are dead in a ferry crash in central Bangladesh.  About a hundred people were on board the vessel on the Padma River when it collided with a trawler about 40 kilometers northwest of Dhaka.  50 passengers swam to shore or were rescued – the search is on for the rest.

Cuba has released a Canadian businessman who was jailed in 2011 on corruption charges.  Cy Tokmakjian and two other employees of his Tokmakjian Group were convicted of bribery as part of an anti-corruption drive.  It’s not clear if the others were released as well, and neither side has linked it to the normalization of relations between Havana and Washington, facilitated by Canada.

High tide in Northern France!  Including at beautiful Mont-Saint-Michel.

Nola the Northern White Rhino gets a pedicure at the San Diego Zoo. She’s one of only five Northern White Rhinos left in the world, all in Zoos or sanctuaries – the rest were poached for their horns, putting the animals on the brink of extinction.