Good Morning Australia!! - More than 60 people are killed in a Taliban bombing in Pakistan - A planned rally against fear somehow morphed into a far right clash with cops - Ireland marks a Century since the uprising that planted the seeds of a nation - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

A suicide bomber attacked a park in the Pakistani capital of Lahore filled with Christian families with children were celebrating the Easter holiday.  At least 60 people are dead and hundreds more are injured.  Witnesses and reporters describe heart-rending scenes of carnage and pools of blood where families were sitting.  Police say most of the dead and injured are women and children.  A faction of the Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility.

In Brussels, police fired water cannons and tear gas at a large group of right-wing demonstrators who infiltrated the Place de la Bourse in Brussels, which had become the city's place for memorials to the victims of last week's bombings.  Organizers had earlier called off a planned "March Against Fear" because police said they couldn't protect it and investigate the bombings simultaneously.  The right wingers stormed the public square, picking fights and harassing people they perceived to be Muslims with nazi salutes.  Riot police quickly arrived to chase the hooligans away, stretching the meager resources of the tiny state.

Syrian forces have all but completed the reclaiming of Palmyra from Islamic State.  Gunfire is still reported in scattered parts of the residential area, and the ancient Roman ruins are damaged, but not as badly as feared:  "We were expecting the worst," said Syrian antiquities chief Maamoun Abdulkarim, "But the landscape, in general, is in good shape."  Officials will examine the world heritage site in the coming days to determine the damage caused by Islamic State's looting and dynamiting of the treasures.

Authorities in Cameroon and Nigeria are investigator a girl who claims to be one of the 270 schoolgirl kidnapped by Boko Haram in Chibok in 2014, which sparked the international campaign and hashtag #BringBackOurGirls - some escaped the mass abduction but many were still missing.  The Nigerian government is sending parents to Cameroon to attempt to identify her. The girl and another were reportedly carrying explosives when captured by local self-defense forces, suggesting that the terrorist group had used at least some of the Chibok girls as suicide bombers.

Bolivia is taking Chile to the World Court over a border dispute.  President Evo Morales has said his country owns the Silala spring in a border region, and that its should be compensated for the water taken by Chile, which is used in mining in its north.  Bolivia already has an open case against Chile at the International Court of Justice over access to the Pacific Ocean.

Malaysia's top prosecutor was planning to file charges against Prime Minister Najib Razak in the 1MDB scandal just before he was ousted last year, according to a report on the ABC's Four Corners.  The development bank "1 Malaysia Development Berhad" (1MDB) mysteriously lost a billion dollars right around the time a similar amount of money mysteriously appeared in the personal account of Mr. Najib, who has since explained that his windfall was a "gift" from Saudi Arabia.  There are reportedly at least four international investigations probing this.

More bad news for Journalists:  Al Jazeera is laying off about ten percent of its workforce.  That's about 500 jobs.  This is on top of closing down its Al Jazeera America news channel, which will completed within days.  Al Jazeera is funded by the Qatar government, which in turn is dependent oil and gas revenue, which are depressed in teh current world market.

Millions of Irish marked 100 years since the 1916 Rebellion that eventually led to the formation of an Irish Republic.  One of the first ceremonies had President Michael Higgins placing a wreath at the spot where 15 rebels were executed for their part in the Rising, which just five years later would lead to the Irish Republic - although without the six countries of the north.  Up there, the political party Sinn Fein organized the region's largest observance with a parade through West Belfast to the republican plot at Milltown cemetery, where many figures of the Republican movement are buried.