Good Morning Australia!! - A woman is killed in WA's second deadly shark attack in a week - The next Philippine president is inciting mob violence - There'll be no free lunch in Switzerland, which is a shame because I love fondue - A Monkey Robs a Jewelry Shop - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

A woman has died after a shark attack north of Perth, less than a week after a surfer was mortally wounded in an attack off West Australia.  The 60-year old woman and her diving partner were in the water about 2 kilometers off Mindarie when it happened on Sunday morning.  Fishers came to help, but the woman died before reaching shore.  The fishers noted that their boat was 5.3 meters long, and the shark was longer than that.  Last Tuesday, a Great White bite off the log of 29-year old surfer Ben Gerring off Mandurah south of Perth; he died of his injuries on Friday.

Philippine president-elect Rodrigo Duterte is taking the brakes off of mob action and encouraging citizens to kill people they perceive to be criminals.  No arrest, no investigation, no trial - just kill 'em.  So, good luck with that, Philippines.  Laughing with reporters, Duterte offered big bounties for extrajudicial killing and warned, "If you are involved in drugs, I will kill you.  You son of a whore, I will really kill you."  In the presidential campaign, Duterte said police and troops would be used in what he promised would be "a bloody war" against crime.

Voters in Peru are casting ballots in the presidential runoff election.  The candidates are the daughter of a murderous dictator who denies some of daddy's worst atrocities, and a former World Bank and IMF banker who espouses the crappy neoliberal policies that a recent IMF admitted don't work.  So, good luck with that, Peru.

Islamic militants are suspected in the murder of the wife of a senior police official in Bangladesh.  Mahmuda Aktar was stabbed and shot in Chittagong shortly afterpeople her six year old son on a school bus.  Her husband is Superintendent Babul Aktar, who is investigating militant groups and played a key role in arresting the leader of the banned Islamist Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh group.  More than 28 people - university professors, secular bloggers, gay rights activists, foreigners, and members of religious minorities - have been murdered in similar circumstances since February last.

The US Embassy is warning its citizens in South Africa to beware of potential Islamist attacks in that country's major cities.  A statement said the US government received information indicating that "near-term attacks against places where US citizens congregate in South Africa, such as upscale shopping areas and malls in Johannesburg and Cape Town".  South Africa's government played down the alert, saying that its security agencies were "very much capable of keeping South Africa safe and everybody in this country, including Americans".

A gunman with a hunting rifle took some shots at a tourist bus in southeastern France, injuring six people.  The bus was carrying Czech tourists home from a visit to Spain.  Police now have officers posted on highway bridges while they hunt the perpetrator.

Voters in Switzerland rejected a plan to provide everyone with a basic income for everyone living in the wealthy country, with 76.9 percent of voters opposed.  The margin is overwhelming, to be sure - but it was not as big as supporters imagined.  As a businessman I am a realist and had reckoned with 15 percent support," said said the leader of the failed measure, cafe owner Daniel Haeni in Basel.  "Now it looks like more than 20 percent or maybe even 25 percent.  I find that fabulous and sensational," he said.  The idea was to provide every Swiss citizen with a baseline income of AU$3,500 per month no matter how much they work, to promote human dignity and public service - and to acknowledge that people are losing their jobs to automation.

Cuban President Raul Castro says his country will never rejoin the Organization of American States (OAS), in "our most firm solidarity to our brothers the Venezuelan people, to the legitimate government of President Nicolas Maduro".  The general secretary of the OAS - generally known to be US-friendly - is calling for economic sanctions against Venezuela because Washington doesn't like that a right-wing coup hasn't happened yet.  Cuba was expelled from the OAS in 1962, but there was speculation it might return after the thaw in relations between Havana and Washington.

CCTV caught video of a monkey robbing a jewelry store of more than AU$150.  This happened last month in India's southern Andhra Pradesh state.  A shop employee offered it the monkey a piece of fruit, but he used it asa pretense to sneak into the store, make his way to the cashier's drawer, and scoop up the cash.  Employees chased after it, but he's a monkey - he got away.