Good Morning Australia!! - The UN issues a dire warning over a war-torn Syrian city - Two autocrats decide to bury the hatchet - Israel arrests a second aid worker for alleged ties to terrorism - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Updates:

The Presidents of Russia and Turkey have met to put this year's disputes behind them.  Recep Tayyip Erdogan traveled to Saint Petersburg for a summit with Vladimir Putin, who agreed to phase out Russia's trade sanctions on Turkey "step by step" and to "get back to the pre-crisis level of co-operation".  Erdogan said, "The Moscow-Ankara friendship axis will be restored."  Relations between the two autocrats soured when Russian forces began actively supporting its ally the Syrian government in that country's civil war; and things got worse when Turkey shot down a Russian jet that flew along its southern border with Syria.

The United Nations children's' agency UNICEF says children in the besieged Syrian city of Aleppo are at "grave risk" of disease unless water supplies and power are immediately repaired.  Temperatures in Aleppo have already hit 40 C degrees this week.  "These cuts are coming amid a heatwave, putting children at a grave risk of waterborne diseases," said UNICEF's Hanaa Singer.  "Getting clean water running again cannot wait for the fighting to stop.  Children's lives are in serious danger," she added.  Government forces backed by Russian air power have the rebel-held city encircled, with supplies cut off to two million people.

Israel's Shin Bet security service has charged a second aid worker with funneling money and resources to Hamas, which is considered a terrorist group by Israel and much of the West.  They arrested Waheed Borsh of the UN Development Program (UNDP) last month, accusing him of building a jetty off Gaza for Hamas' military use; and with giving Hamas members priority on lists of homes to rebuild.  Last week, Israel charged World Vision's Gaza project manager Mohammed Halabi with diverting millions of dollars in aid money to Hamas' military.  Mr. Halabi denies the allegations.

A judge in Brazil says police cannot expel people from the Olympics for peaceful political expression.  It comes in the case of a number of Brazilians who were kicked out of Maracana Stadium and other venues by security forces while wearing T-Shirts and holding signs criticizing appointed "president" Michel Temer.  The judge says only those promoting racist and xenophobic messages could be expelled.  Loving that judge!

Kenya has detained its Olympic athletics team manager Michael Rotich after recalling him from the 2016 Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro.  Undercover reporters from Germany and the UK posed as track coaches, and purportedly recorded Mr. Rotich claiming he that, for a pay off, he could protect dirty athletes from doping blood tests.  Sports officials in Nairobi ordered Rotich to get on the next plane home, promising to show "no mercy" if the allegations are verified.

A group supporting MH370 families accuses Malaysia of ignoring potential evidence found on the beaches of southern Madagascar - the same area where pieces of the crashed passenger plane have been located.  Air Crash Support Group Australia (ASGA) says it knows of more than 160 personal belongings found on the beach, and they are sort of thing that one would find inside of that specific flight's aircraft passenger cabin:  Items such as camera cases, clothing, handbags, Muslim prayer caps.  ASGA says Malaysian investigators seem disinterested:  "Malaysia will not go and pick them up," ASGA's Sher Kean told the ABC.  "They have said three times that they'll be there to pick them up, three times they have cancelled," she added.  MH370 took off from Kuala Lumpur for Beijing in March of 2014, but apparently veered wildly off course and crashed somewhere in the Indian Ocean, killing all 239 passengers and crew including six Australians.

Guitarist and Mandolin player Padraig Duggan is dead at age 67.  He's a founding member of the Irish folk music group Clannad, which has been going strong since the 1970s but found mainstream success writing the themes to the TV shows "Harry's Game" and "Robin of Sherwood", and helped set the stage for the Celtic Wave in music, dance, and entertainment in the 1990s.  Other significant songs include "In a Lifetime", "Both Sides Now", "Newgrange", and just download the "Best of" for more.