Hello Australia!! - Labor pushes for an investigation into the Nauru detention camp - Syrian women burn their burkas after Islamic state is kicked out of town - The Burkini ban is upheld in Cannes - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Shadow immigration minister Shayne Neumann will call for a parliamentary inquiry into allegations of sexual assault and child abuse at the Nauru detention center.  This comes after The Guardian newspaper published more than 2,000 leaked reports that exposed numerous assaults, sexual assaults and child abuse, examples of self-harm attempts, and deplorable living conditions endured by asylum seekers held by the Australian government.  Immigration minister Peter Dutton denies the allegations as "false" reports;  Mr. Neumann says Mr. Dutton's response was "dismissive and disgraceful", and that Labor will move swiftly to establish a senate inquiry in the new parliament to investigate . 

The women of Manbij, Syria burned their black burkas and men shaved off the beards they were forced to grow under the totalitarian rule of Islamic State, as the combined forced of the Syrian Defense Forces, a US-backed group of Kurdish fighters.  A Kurdish twitter account posted a photo of a woman defiantly smoking a cigarette, something she could have been beaten or imprisoned for during the draconian rule of IS.  "May God destroy them.  They slaughtered us," a young man said of the fleeing IS fighters, "May they not live for a minute."  It's the biggest loss for IS in a year; the fleeing terrorists were seen heading north to a stronghold village near the Turkish border.

The President of Kyrgyzstan lobbed a grenade in the international debate over the Burka, Niqab, Chador, et cetera:  "Women in mini skirts don't become suicide bombers," said Almazbek Atambayev, suggesting that women can become radicalized to become terrorists if they put on what some consider to be traditional Islamic dress.  "Terrorists are insane people," Mr. Atambayey said, "Clothes also can change one's thoughts sometimes.  It follows a criticized campaign of billboards and banners that urged women to adopt more modern clothing.  Aside from the obvious implications of trying to mansplain what women "should" wear, President Atambayey has in the past complained about the creeping influence of Saudi-style intolerance.

A French judge is backing the ban on the "Burkini" on the beaches of the Riviera city of Cannes.  The swimwear that covers everything but a woman's face and feet is marketed to Muslim women who subscribe to traditional modest Middle Eastern dress.  The judge notes that the ban comes "in the context of the state of emergency and recent Islamist attacks, notably in Nice a month ago".  France bans the full-face veil, but has no prohibitions on wearing religious symbols or clothing.

The medical charity Medecins sans Frontieres blames a Saudi air strike for killing ten children in their school in Yemen.  All of the victims and 21 more wounded kids were under 15 years of age.  The Saudis are trying to reinstall a friendly government against the Iran-backed Houthis and Islamic State fighters who are vying for power in the civil war.

A man ignited flammable liquid and stabbed several people on a train in the Swiss town of Salez in St. Gallen canton; six people were injured with stab wounds and burns, including a six-year old boy.  Police say the attacker was a 27-year old Swiss man, but aren't discounting terrorism as a motive just yet.

Russia's only track and field athlete in Rio, Darya Klishina, has been banned after the sport's governing body received "new information".  Ms. Klishina was the only Russian approved to compete as an independent after Russia's entire track and field team was banned because of the World Anti-Doping Agency's (WADA) report exposing state-sponsored doping.  Klishina says she is innocent of doping and blames "politics".

The whistle-blower who helped uncover the Russian doping scandal and her husband have been moved to a new safehouse outside Russia, after hackers got into WADA's system and learned their location.  WADA locked down the system to prevent any more details from getting out and is cooperating with law enforcement agencies.  Yulia Stepanova and her husband Vitaly - a former anti-doping officer in Russia - have been praised internationally but castigate and villainized at home.