Hello Australia!! - International scorn follows North Korea's nuclear test - Dozens spend the night dangling over the Alps - France says Islamic State was behind the failed terrorist plot in Paris - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

World leaders found rare common ground in their condemnation of North Korea for its fifth nuclear weapon test yesterday.  The United States, Japan, Russia, and China all condemned the blast at the Punggye-ri nuclear site, which was the North's fifth and most powerful yet at 10 kilotons.  South Korea's president slammed NK leader Kim Jong-un's "maniacal recklessness".  Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull likewise described the test as a "reckless, provocative dangerous action".

French officials say one of the three women arrested outside Paris for allegedly planning a terrorist attack had been "betrothed" to two jihadists who had been killed in particularly cowardly attacks.  One took part in the attack on a church in Northern France, slitting an 80-year old priest's throat; the other murdered a police official and his police officer wife in their home.  Investigators say the car found containing several gas cylinders parked near Notre Dame cathedral was to be used in an attack on a nearby train station, in a plot guided by Islamic State.

Four people died in the derailment and crash of a tourist train in northwest Spain.  The train was traveling from Vigo, Spain to Porto, Portugal when it veered off the tracked and crashed into a column.  The Portuguese driver was killed, as were two Spanish and one American passengers.

The last of dozens of tourists who were trapped on stalled gondolas thousands of meters above the French Alps near Mont Blanc are now out of danger.  Rescuers in helicopters pulled 65 people out of the dangling cable cars until light and weather conditions made it impossible to continue.  That meant that 45 weary and frightened people had to stay up there at 3,600 meters altitude overnight, until engineers untangled the cables and allowed the gondolas to return to the terminal. 

Facebook says it will allow people to post the chilling photo of Phan Thị Kim Phuc, who was photographed in 1972 running naked and injured from her home village in Vietnam after a US napalm attack against the Viet Cong.  The social network deleted the photo from a Norwegian author's timeline because it contains nudity.  After an uproar, Facebook said it had "listened to the community" and acknowledged the "global importance" of the historic photo.

Cops in East Liverpool, Ohio had enough of the area's heroin epidemic and posted photos of a couple overdosed in the front seat of their car, while their four year old son stood in the back of the vehicle.  County Children's Services took custody of the boy when 50-year old Rhonda Pasek and 47-year old James Acord passed out in the middle of a traffic stop.  Police say they're publicizing the grim and disturbing photo of what looks like two living corpses to draw attention to the scurge of heroin.

The US Army Corps of Engineers has suspended work on the Dakota Access Pipeline on its land running next to the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in North Dakota, until local environmental issues can be studied.  This is despite a US judge ruling against the indigenous activists, saying Standing Rock hadn't adequately shown the project will destroy "sites of cultural and historical significance".  Opposition to the pipeline, which is planned to cross several crucial waterways and the main fresh water source for the reservation, has brought together an unprecedented coalition of environmentalists and indigenous activists from groups across the US, Canada, and Mexico, as well as support from Australia and New Zealand.