Good Morning Australia!! - Bad signs in the search for a cargo ship lost in a Hurricane - Horror as a Porsche supercar strikes people at a car show - MSF demands an investigation into the US bombing of one of its hospitals - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Terrible weather around the globe:  French President Francois Hollande announced a state of "natural disaster" after powerful storms and flooding killed at least 16 people in Southern France, leaving cars and debris littering the streets.  At least three elderly people died when a river spilled its banks next to a retirement home.  Several people are still missing.

In China, Typhoon Mujigae slammed ashore in the south's Guangdong Province.  Several people captured video of a tornado wreaking havoc as it crossed from farm fields into high-rise housing.  At least four people are dead and more than a hundred fishers required rescue off the coast.

In South Carolina, four people are dead and hundreds are stranded in what officials are calling a 500-year flood.  Hurricane Joaquin is spinning offshore and not expected to make landfall, but it's stirring up the seas and creating huge, wet weather systems across America's East Coast.  The problems won't be limited to flash floods and dams collapsing; The runoff from the mountains is bound to cause trouble all week.

Further back on Joaquin's path, searchers found floating debris and an oil sheen off the southeastern Bahamas where a US cargo ship with 33 people on board went missing.  When the El Faro last contacted the US Coast Guard, it had lost power and was taking on water.

A Porsche 918 went out of control at a car show on Malta, resulting in at least 21 injuries and lots of video.  Three people are in a critical condition.  "The car was speeding down the taxiway when a back wheel went on the grass. The car spun out of control, went through the barriers where a large crowd was watching, and into the area of the static car exhibition," an eyewitness told local media.  "Many people were hit, there was chaos and screams."

Doctors Without Borders confirmed it is pulling out of the northern Afghan city of Kunduz after a NATO aerial attack on one of its hospitals.  "No medical activities are possible now in the MSF hospital in Kunduz, at a time when the medical needs are immense," said Tim Shenk, using the acronym for the group's French title Medecins Sans Frontieres.  Calling for an independent international war crimes investigation of the US-led coalition, MSF also raised the death toll to 22 lives lost - ten patients including three children, and twelve staff members.  Government troops are (supposedly) closing in on their goal of taking the city back from the Taliban.

Emboldened by anti-Islamic State air raids ordered by his Kremlin allies, Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad says a coalition between Syria, Russia, Iran and Iraq must succeed "or else the whole region will be destroyed".  Taunting the US-led coalition, Assad said the Russian raids would achieve "practical results".

There are fears of the West Bank being dragged into another long cycle of violence:  Israel is banning Palestinian men under age 50 from Jerusalem's old city - including the El Aqsa Mosque - after knife attacks on Israelis.  Police shot and killed the attackers, but not before they wounded a teenager and killed an elderly couple.  Senior Fatah factions say the attacks were not the work of any organized factions - Israeli Prime Minister is vowing to tear down Palestinian homes deemed to be terrorist hotbeds.