Good Morning Australia! - As opposed to having "no worries", many Aussies are worried indeed - The Paris terrorism fugitive's brother wants him to surrender to police - Argentina might be on the verge of a major political shift - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Okay, everyone in Australia: Just chill.  The Australian reports that three quarters of those responding to the latest Newspoll believe a large-scale terror attack is likely in the land of "No Worries".  And one in four believe it's inevitable.  Only one percent of those responding believe it will never happen.  Unfortunately, two thirds wrongly think the Muslim community isn't doing enough to condemn terrorist acts, even though that belief is demonstrably false.  Perhaps those Aussies ought to read CareerSpot news more often.  Yes, bad things happen.  No, there's no sense in wetting the bed over them.

As if on cue, Police say there are twelve Australian men and boys you should be really, really afraid of!  These twelve are being very closely watched, according to Australian Federal Police counter-terrorism chief Neil Gaughan - who didn't mention anything about arrests or charges.  But they are, he says, associated with seven other people who have been jailed and are suspected to trying to recruit younger men into violent jihadism.  "I think there can be no doubt that there's a small group in Sydney that are engaged in activity which wants to upset the Australian way of life," Gaughan told ABC's Four Corners program.

Meanwhile, the state of emergency over a "serious and imminent" Paris-style terrorist attack is being extended in Brussels.  Universities, schools, and the metro would stay shut, while people are being urged to avoid congregating in large groups and eating in restaurants.  Brussels has been on lockdown all weekend, as police hunt for suspected Paris attacker Salah Abdeslam.

Older brother Mohamed Abdeslam went on Belgian TV to urge his younger sibling to turn himself in to police, saying that he'd rather see Salah in prison than in a grave.  Police had briefly detained Mohamed after Salah and a third brother Ibrahim (corrected from "Brahim" in earlier reports) took part in the 13 November terrorist attacks in Paris that killed 130 people.  Ibrahim blew himself up.  But there's speculation that Salah might have had second thoughts about igniting a suicide vest, and that his terrorist pals in Islamic State aren't particularly happy with that.  Getting back to Mohamed, he told a Belgian interviewer that he did notice that the other two had recently quit drinking and started praying more often, but he didn't see that as symptoms of having become radicalized.

Breaking news from Argentina:  Exit polls indicate that conservative candidate Mauricio Macri has won the Presidential runoff election.  If true, it would end twelve years of the Kirchner Era, begun by the late Nestor Kirchner in 2003 and carried on by his wife and outgoing President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner.  Their policies saw increased spending on infrastructure for the poor and working classes, a stronger commitment to human rights, and independence from the Western Powers.  Macri, on the other hand, called in help for his election campaign from the United States:  So here come tax cuts for the rich, neoliberalism, sucking up/selling out to Washington, and revenge political prosecutions.

Nearly a hundred bodies have been recovered from a massive landslide at a jade mine in Myanmar.  Many of the dead are described as poor people living on the edges of the waste dumps from the lucrative jade mines, who scavenged through the waste for shards of the precious mineral.  That waste pile collapsed on them, burying scores of people. 

Veteran actor Keith Michell is dead in London at age 88.  Born in Adelaide and raised in South Australia, he moved to London in 1949 and is known for his extensive TV and Film work, and especially for playing British King Henry VIII in "The Six Wives of Henry VIII" on TV and in its cinematic follow-up in the early 1970s, and reprised in "The Prince and the Pauper" in the 1990s.  His films include: "Dangerous Exile" (1958); "The Hell Fire Club" (1961); "All Night Long" (1962); "Seven Seas to Calais" (1962); "The Executioner" (1970).  Your grandmum knows him from his recurring role as reformed jewel thief-turned-good guy Dennis Stanton on the US TV series "Murder She Wrote".