Good Morning Australia!! - Has more of MH370 been found? - China stops Philippine fishing boats in their own waters near area where Beijing built bases in the South China Sea - Dashcam video shows how not to be a grandfather - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

A piece of debris that washed up on an African beach appears to be part of missing Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370, which disappeared almost two years ago. "Based on early reports, high possibility debris found in Mozambique belongs to a B777,” tweeted Malaysia's Minister of Transport Liow Tiong Lai, adding:  "I urge everyone to avoid undue speculation as we are not able to conclude that the debris belongs to MH370 at this time."  The Boeing 777 went missing on 8 March 2014, deviating sharply from its scheduled route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.   There were 239 passengers and crew on board, including six Australians.

China is blocking Philippine boats from their traditional fishing waters around a disputed atoll in the South China Sea.  "This is very alarming," said the mayor of nearby Pagasa Island in the Spratly Islands Eugenio Bito-onon Jr.  "The Chinese are trying to choke us by putting an imaginary checkpoint there. It is a clear violation of our right to travel, impeding freedom of navigation," he added.  As many as seven Chinese ships have been spotted, but the Foreign Ministry in Beijing claimed the vessels were there to tow a grounded ship and have since left.  This is happening near the reefs and island that China claimed last year and used to build several bases in the South China Sea, hundreds of kilometers beyond its internationally-recognized maritime boundaries.

A powerful earthquake struck off of Sumatra, sending villagers scurrying to higher ground.  But Indonesia lifted a tsunami warning, as did the Joint Australian Tsunami Warning Center with an earlier tsunami watch for Western Australia.  There appears to be no major damage resulting from the quake.

Jordan says seven jihadists and police officer were killed in a raid in the town of Irbid that stopped a so-called Islamic State plot to attack civilian and military targets in the country.  Jordan is part of the US-led coalition against IS in Syria.

A US general and NATO commander is accusing Russia and Syria of "weaponizing" refugees and migrants to try and destabilize and undermine Europe.  General Philip Breedlove claims there are criminals and extremists amid the multitudes who have abandoned Syria and Iraq because of war and headed to Europe in hopes of being granted asylum in someplace like Germany or Sweden. 

The world's worst nanny appeared in a Moscow court claiming that Allah told her to behead a four-year old girl she cared for and wave the head around outside a metro station.  38-year old Gulchekhra Bobokulova apparently hid her schizophrenia from her employers, according to some reports.  Russian investigators are hunting two men linked to an international extremist group who may have encouraged her.

Here a grandpa who probably won't be asked to babysit again.  The rear door on Yang Defu's van popped open at an intersection in central China, and his two-year old grandson fell out.  The toddler ran after Defu as he drove off, unaware of what just happened.  The driver of the car whose dashcam caught this picked up the screaming kid and gave chase, eventually reuniting the two.

A judge in Brazil ordered police to release a Facebook executive who refused to release company information to cops.  "It seems to me that the extreme measure of imprisonment was hurried," Judge Ruy Pinheiro said the decision to arrest Diego Dzodan.  Facebook says it doesn't even collect the information about WhatsApp users that cops are seeking to further an investigation into drug dealing.