Good Morning, Australia! – Terrorists kill eight in Tunisia – Israel’s opposition concedes the win to Bibi Netanyahu – Hundreds are arrested in massive, violent anti-austerity demonstrations – And a lot more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Gunmen in military uniforms attacked a museum in downtown Tunis, Tunisia, killing at least 19 people and wounding at a minimum 22 more.  17 of the dead were foreigners visiting the National Bardo Museum, reportedly including French, German, and Polish nationals.  Tunisians cheered as authorities retook control.  Suspicion immediately fell on Islamic State, which has been increasing its activities in northern Africa.  Of all of the countries involved in the “Arab Spring” four years ago, Tunisia was the most successful in transforming itself into a Democracy.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is vowing to form a new government within two or three weeks, after his stunning upset reelection in Tuesday’s elections.  President Reuvin Rivlin hasn’t actually asked him to do it yet, and earlier called for a national unity government – something Bibi had already ruled out.  Opposition leader Yitzhak Herzog has already called to congratulate Netanyahu.  US Secretary of State has too, but President Barack Obama has not.

Anti-austerity protests outside the European Central Bank’s new headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany turned violent, casting a shadow over the ceremonial opening of the glitzy, billion-Euro tower.  Protesters set fire to barricades and police cars, rubbish bins and even some shops in the city center.  Police arrested some 550 people in the chaos, but the Blockupy movement which organized the peaceful end of the demonstrations vows to defeat the root cause of all of the problems – austerity and predatory capitalism.

Serbian authorities for the first time have arrested eight suspects in the Srebrenica Massacre in Bosnia during the 1990s Balkans Wars.  The eight are accused of executing more than 1,000 Muslim Bosniaks at a warehouse just outside Srebrenica.  It was Europe’s worst civilian slaughter since World War II.

She was just relected a few months ago, but Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff’s poll ratings are crashing.  62 percent of those responding to a new poll say Rousseff’s government was “bad” or “terrible”.  That was just 44 percent a month ago.  Only 13 percent of respondents rated her government as “great” or “good”.  It’s the worst popularity rating for a Brazilian president since 1992 when then-President Fernando Collor was impeached for corruption.

Dilma’s trouble flow from an US$800 Million bribe and kickback scheme uncovered in the state-owned oil company Petrobras.  Swiss authorities have unfrozen more than US$120 Million as part of the international investigation into Petrobras.  The money will be returned to the rightful owners “with the agreement of two account holders”, authorities said without further elaboration.  Switzerland has frozen more than 300 accounts at 30 banks tied to the scandal at Petrobras.

American and Japanese authorities are investigating death threats made to US Ambassador Caroline Kennedy and other US officials in Japan.  A man speaking English phoned the US Embassy in Tokyo, making threats apparently related to the presence of American troops in Okinawa.  First Lady Michelle Obama arrived in Japan on Wednesday for a three-day visit.