Hello Australia!! - The main suspect in the Paris Attacks is captured after four months on the run - A bad judicial decision undoes all of the work Mexico City did to rid itself of smog - A lion runs loose in the big city, one man is injured - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Brussels police captured Salah Abdeslam, the one terrorist who survived last November's attacks in Paris that killed 130 people.  France's BFM-TV recorded video the moment police popped a hood over his head and bundled him in the back of a car.  Abdeslam was believed to have been hiding out in the troubled Molenbeek neighborhood since the day after the attack; his fingerprints were found in a Brussels flat raided earlier this week.  Police also recovered weapons and ammunition, fake IDs and Syrian passports, but no explosives - however, they had broken up what was believed to be a terrorist bomb factory in January.

France's President French President Francois Hollande said he expected Salah Abdeslam to be extradited to France "as rapidly as possible".  But he also there were many more people involved in the Paris Attack plot, and operations to clean up every detail will continue:  "So until we have arrested all those who took part or contributed, financed that terrorist network that committed the abominable attacks, the war acts of the 13 November, our fight will not be over until then."

Saudi Arabia is causing twice as many civilian casualties in the Yemen civil war than all other factions.  The United Nations human rights chief Zeid Raad Al Hussein condemned "the repeated failure" of the coalition to prevent deadly incidents.  Mr. Hussein says almost all of the more than 6,000 deaths are attributable to airstrikes by the Saudi-led coalition:  "They have hit markets, hospitals, clinics, schools, factories, wedding parties - and hundreds of private residences in villages, towns and cities including the capital, Sanaa."

Mexico City is bracing for more smog, after declaring its first smog emergency in more than a decade for four eye-watering days earlier this week.  The capital has come a long way since the bad old days of the 1980s and '90s, moving factories away from the city and banning cars in various ways.  But a conservative judge last year overturned a rule that kept 1.4 million of the oldest, most-polluting cars off the roads for one week a month. They're back on the roads, and Mexico City's sky is as dirty as ever.

A Beijing newspaper columnist has disappeared after taking a flight to Hong Kong.  It's feared that Jia Jia may be in police custody as part of President Xi Jinping's crackdown on anything that might betray the slightest glimmer of dissent.  Mr. Jia might be suspected of authorship of a scathing open letter calling for President Xi to step down, accusing him of growing a cult of personality and warning of a threat to Xi's personal safety.

Guinea is reporting two new cases of Ebola, three months after it was declared Ebola-free and ended its part in the West African Ebola Epidemic.  The new patients are members of the same famly, and three more family members are believed to have died of the practically unstoppable killer virus.  ALl of the new cases were reported in the southern region of Nzerekore, where the outbreak began in December 2013.  Since then, Ebola killed more than 11,300 people - mostly in Guinea and its neighbors Sierra Leone and Liberia.

A male lion escaped from Nairobi Wildlife Park into a populated neighborhood of the Kenyan capital and attacked a 63-year old man.  Officials say the beast was probably made nervous by people honking their car horns it at, and trying to take selfies.  The man is in hospital being treated for his injuries.  The wildlife park is fenced on its border with the city, but open on the other side to allow annual migrations.