Hello Australia! - Heat is building under Malaysia's Prime Minister - Refugee children rescued from a crowded smuggler's van have disappeared from hospital - President Obama restores indigenous pride to America's loftiest peak - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Malaysia's former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad has joined tens of thousands of anti-government protesters, now on their third day of demonstrations in Kuala Lumpur and other cities.  They're calling for the resignation of the current PM Najib Razak.  Mohamad is calling for a "people's power" movement to topple his former deputy, who refuses to divulge the identity of the mysterious "foreign donor" who deposited around A$1 Billion in Najib's personal bank account.  Many suspect the money came from a tax-payer funded development fund that went broke.  "There's no more rule of law.  The only way for the people to get back to the old system is for them to remove this prime minister," said Mahathir.  "We must remove this prime minister."

Tokyo has seen its largest protest against the government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's new security legislation, a package that would allow the military to take part in foreign operations for the first time since World War II.  It could become become law as early as September.  The organizers have brought 120,000 people out to the capital, numbers not seen since the anti-war protests of the 1960s, but whether they can maintain these size of crowds past the summer break remains to be seen.   The demonstrators are also upset over Abe's failure to jump-start the economy as promised, as well as Abe's drive to restart the nuclear reactors that were shut down after the Fukushima Nuclear Disaster.  "I think there are a growing number of people like me who realized our fortunes have only turned worse under Abe's government," said Etsuko Matsuda, who came all the way from Sendai in northern Japan to take part.  "I hope more people would be interested in politics and speak up."

Three children have disappeared from an Austrian hospital, after they were found suffering severe dehydration in the back of a minivan with more than 23 other refugees seeking a new life in Europe.  Officials suspect their families might have spirited the children away to Germany, where the conditions for asylum seekers are much better - than to face deportation to Hungary.  The European border control agency Frontex says a record number of 107,500 migrants reached the EU's borders last month.  Since the beginning of the year, more than 2,500 have died, most of them drowning in the Mediterranean Sea.

Brazil is hunting a small town mayor who ran the town remotely from an internet app while the town's education funding was being sucked dry.  The equivalent of A$5.6 Million is missing from school coffers in Bom Jardim town in the country's northeast, and teachers are not being paid.  Meanwhile, 25-year old mayor Lidiane Leite was living a life of luxury with her boyfriend in the state capital 275 kilometers today, issuing instructions via WhatsApp.  Leite's chief adviser was her now-former boyfriend - former mayor Beto Rocha, who was banned from running for mayor in 2012 for alleged corruption.

US President Barack Obama restored the indigenous name to the nation's tallest mountain:  Mount McKinley will now be known as Denali.  The state of Alaska had already changed its official recognition to Denali a long time ago.  But federal action had always been blocked by Ohio's influential congressional delegation, which wanted the mountain to be named after its native son - former President William McKinley who never visited Alaska.  Mr. Obama will make his first visit to the state on Monday.

Hey, would you like for your adorable fuzzy best friend to be mistaken for a murderous, demonic carnivore without pity?  If so, just get one of these werewolf muzzles from Russia, and slap it on the family dog.  It's made of non-toxic plastic and features a set of bloodied teeth and gums set in a fearsome expression that hopefully won't cause people to have heart attacks - or worse yet, cause them to think of self-defense.