Hello, Australia! – An Australian was killed in Tunisia – Two Australians won’t be killed in Indonesia, at least for the time being – A US drone takes out a notorious terrorist – Don’t soak the homeless – Top Gear's Jeremy Clarkson lawyers up – And a lot more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

An Indonesian court put off the executions of convicted “Bali 9” drug traffickers Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran for at least this month, after postponing their appeal hearing against the rejection of a request for presidential clemency.  President Joko Widodo has refused to budge on the matter.  The judge says final arguments would be heard on 1 April and a verdict would be announced soon afterwards.

An Australian with dual Colombian citizenship was one of the 19 people killed in the terrorist attack at a famous museum in downtown Tunis, Tunisia.  “Our thoughts and prayers are with the man’s family, to whom we will extend all consular assistance,” read the statement from PM Tony Abbott and FM Julie Bishop.  The victim resided in NSW.  The terrorists also killed tourists from Japan, Colombia, Spain, France, Italy, and Poland.  Militants in military style uniforms burst from a vehicle and started mowing down tourists climbing out of buses outside the Bardo National Museum.  They charged inside to take hostages before two of them were killed in a firefight with Tunisian security.  Three gunmen may have gotten away.

A US drone strike in Somalia killed the terrorist who helped coordinate the Westgate Mall massacre in Nairobi, Kenya in 2013.  The Pentagon says Adan Garar with the al Shabaab group was killed in a strike on his vehicle in Diinsoor in southern Somalia on 12 March.  67 people were killed when al Shabaab militants stormed the mall, shooting civilians and setting off explosions. 

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin on Sunday will meet with the party factions of the Knesset; each will present their recommendations for the member most capable of forming a governing coalition.  Although Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s conservative Likud got the most votes in this week’s election, it got less than half of the clear majority needed to control the Knesset.  Under Israeli parliament rules, Rivlin can choose any member he deems fit. 

The United Nations Human Rights chief is concerned over “flagrant irregularities” in the case of the former president of the Maldives, who was arrested and sentenced to 13-years in prison for terrorism. Mohamed Nasheed’s trial is widely seen as a sham.  UN high commissioner for human rights Zeid Raad al-Hussein says, “It is hard to see how such hasty proceedings can be compatible with the authorities’ obligations under international law to conduct a fair trial.”

British military advisors are in Ukraine to train that country’s troops on fighting the Kremlin-backed rebels in the east.  35 trainers are instructing on medicine and defensive tactics, and supplying non-lethal equipment such as first aid kits, sleeping bags and night-vision goggles.  Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin is for the first time admitting that western economic sanctions over Moscow’s involvement in Ukraine have harmed the Russian economy.  Interfax reports Putin said the sanctions were “not fatal, but naturally damage our ongoing work”.

Three men are dead way up north in Akita, Japan, apparently overcome by hydrogen sulfide gas.  The three were working to adjust the temperature of the Nyuto Hot Springs, and were found in a hole, unresponsive.  Hydrogen Sulfide gas is heavier than air and in high concentrations can overwhelm the human respiratory system.

The Villarrica Volcano in southern Chile is rumbling again, sending smoke and ash from it top and ending a couple weeks of rest.  On 3 March, authorities had to evacuate the area around it as Villarrica spouting red-hot lava. 

Fawn the cow gets around on prosthetic legs.

In gun happy America, Arizona police arrested a neo-nazi ex-con thug after a massive manhunt that saw a good chunk of the area southeast of Phoenix on lockdown – schools, hospitals, you name it.  Authorities say 41-year old Ryan Giroux shot and killed one man in a dumpy motel in Mesa, and wounded two women.  He walked across the street to a cafe and wounded another man there, hijacked a car, shot someone else, and broke into an apartment some ways away.  That’s where police tasered him and took him into custody, leading him away in a biocontainment suit design to preserve DNA evidence on his body.  Giroux spent most of the last 20 years in prison, and has the words “skin” and “head” tattooed on his face, apparently in case he ever looks in the mirror and forgets he’s a total arsehole.

Saint Mary’s Cathedral in San Francisco, California has agreed to remove a sprinkler system installed not to water the lawn – but to soak homeless people and deter them from sleeping in cathedral doorways.  After an outcry, Catholic officials admitted this wasn’t a good way to treat the homeless, of which San Francisco has quite a few.  Not only that, but they may have violated water use rules in drought-parched California.  By comparison, Pope Francis at the Vatican is offering free haircuts, bathing, and laundry facilities to Rome’s homeless.

Aurora Australis!

Suspended Top Gear host Jeremy Clarkson has brought in his lawyers, after an unnamed BBC executive compared his situation with that of former Top of the Pops star Jimmy Saville, who was posthumously revealed to be an evil and prolific pedophile.  Clarkson – who is suspended for allegedly punching a Top Gear producer – is determined to reveal which exec made that comparison to the Mail on Sunday newspaper.  With all of this nasty drama surrounding the world’s favorite car show, ticket holders for the 18 and 19 April BBC Top Gear Festival at Sydney Motorsport Park are wondering if it’s still on?  Organizers released a statement reading, “There are at present no plans to either cancel or postpone the Top Gear Festival in Australia.”