Good Morning Australia!! - Trump's is smaller than Obama's - Madrid protects kids from a right-wing campaign - Was an Ebola hero abandoned by her own comrades? - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

A Norwegian appeals court overturned a lower court's decision that neo-nazi scumbag mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik's human rights were somehow being violated in prison.  Breivik killed 77 people in June 2011, setting off a bomb in Oslo and attacking a Socialist Party youth camp with assault weapons.  He claims his rights are being violated by being kept in near isolation in his three-room cell with a private bath.  Breivik's lawyer indicated he would appeal to Norway's Supreme Court, but that court generally only takes cases that consider wider legal issues.

The Liberian health ministry is investigating the death of one of the heroes of the West African Ebola Epidemic.  Nurse Salome Karwah of Liberia died from complications with childbirth; she was one of Time Magazine's people of the year in 2014, and was pictured on the cover in her nurses uniform.  Her husband rushed her to hospital last month, but accuses staffers of refusing to treat or even touch her because she treated Ebola patients more than two years ago.  This is despite all of Ms. Karwah's recent Ebola tests coming up negative.

Donald Trump's speech before a special joint session of congress drew smaller ratings than did Barack Obama in the same point in his presidency eight years ago.  Compared to President Barack Obama's first address in 2009, Trump's early ratings are down by 17 percent.  Trump's approval ratings are also smaller than Barack Obama's:  57 percent of the TV audience, which was heavily skewed to Republicans, had a very positive reaction to Trump's speech - that's way down from Mr. Obama's 69 percent in 2009.

The UK House of Lords threw a spanner in the Brexit works.  Parliament's upper chamber took the legislation authorizing the government to commence talks to leave the European Union and inserted a clause protecting the rights of EU citizens to remain in the UK.  "You can't do negotiations with people's futures," said Baronness Dianne Hayter, "They're too precious to be used as bargaining chips" in the divorce negotiations.  There are concerns that three million Europeans in the UK and one million Brits in Europe will not be able to keep their jobs, homes, or current standards of freedom of movement when or if the Brexit actually happens.

Argentine prosecutors are investigating allegations conservative President Mauricio Macri improperly granted routes to Colombia's Avianca airlines, after Avianca purchased a company from Macri's family.  Macri's father Franco Macri - one of the country's welathiest men - and presidential aide Fernando De Andreis are suspected of crimes including defrauding the state and influence peddling.  Macri hasn't publicly commented and no charges are filed yet.

An ex-CIA agent walked free from a prison in Portugal, after Italy dropped its extradition request.  Sabrina de Sousa took part in the kidnapping of Islamic cleric Osama Moustafa Hassan Nas, also known as Abu Omar, from Milan in 2003; he was "outsourced" to Egypt where he says he was tortured.  The process was part of the "extraordinary Rendition" program of the Bush Administration that is accused of violating international law and the human rights of its subjects.  De Sousa and 25 other spies were tried and convicted in absentia, and was only jailed in Portugal recently; Abu Omar was also tried and convicted in absentia, but lives in Egypt and probably will never be sent back to Italy.  Back in Rome, President Sergio Mattarella said he's letting this thing fade away because the former Obama Administration already ended the extraordinary rendition program.

Madrid police impounded a bus to prevent hate crimes.  A right-wing Roman Catholic group had used it to display a banner railing against the teaching of tolerance for transgender people in Spanish schools.  Idiotic, puerile slogans included, "Boys have penises, girls have vaginas", and, "Born a man, always a man - born a woman, always a woman".  Madrid city councilmember Purificacion Causapie said the group's campaign was "contrary to the dignity and rights of transsexual children", and she urged the mayor to Madrid remains "a city free of discrimination, violence and attacks on minors".  Officials called it the "bus of shame" and the mayor ordered it out of town as "quickly as possible".