Hello Australia! - A big development with the Iran nuclear deal - The final report on MH17 is coming out - Syrian Kurds are accused of war crimes - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Iran's parliament has approved the nuclear reached with the six world powers.  Iran's news agency said the vote was 161 in favor, 59 against, and 13 abstentions.  The deal requires Tehran to give up its nuclear ambitions in exchange for lifting economic sanctions that have choked the economy for years. 

Kosovo's capital Pristina boiled over with the arrest and questioning of an opposition lawmaker.  Albin Kurti was eventually released after police took him into custody for a stunt in which he set off a tear gas grenade in parliament.  Protesters chanted his name as they rioted in the capital.  They're opposed to an EU-brokered deal that gives ethnic Serbs more autonomy, which they say erodes Kosovo's sovereignty.  Serbia does not recognize Kosovo's independence and regards it as its southern province.

Dutch investigators will put out their final report on the downing of Malaysian Airlines Flight MH17 over Ukraine.  It's expected to point to "high-energy objects from outside the aircraft" striking the plane, which will feed speculation that a surface-to-air missile was responsible.  But the report is not expected to point fingers.  The West and Ukraine maintain that Russian-backed rebels in the east of the country downed it with a Kremlin-supplied missile in a case of mistaken identity.  Moscow denies this, and will issue its own report.  The July 2014 downing of MH17 killed 298, including 27 Australians.

Russian-backed Syrian troops continued their advance through rebel-held territory, as the US air dropped 50 tons of ammunition to rebels in the north.  It appears to be part of the US pivot from the failed policy of training so-called "moderate" rebels - who failed to fight and in many cases turned their weapons over to extremists - to arming and supplying groups with proven track records of fighting Islamic State and the Syrian government.  To that end, some Kurdish fighters announced they are forming a broader coalition of the disparate rebel groups.

Amnesty International is accusing the Kurdish YPG of war crimes in northern Syria.  The group issued a report saying there's evidence that the YPG forced Arab and Turkmen out of their homes in the north, and often razed the buildings.  If true, it's a war crime - but not anywhere near the level of the barrel bomb massacres of civilians carried out by the Syrian government, or the gruesome beheadings and torture that form the warped "sharia law" of Islamic State.  The Kurds have long hoped for a homeland in an area the includes parts of northern Syria and Iraq, as well as southeastern Turkey.

Japan's defense ministry will appeal Tuesday's order of the Governor of Okinawa to revoke a permit that allowed a US military base to move to reclaimed land on an undeveloped part of the island.  Governor Takeshi Onaga campaigned on stopping the Futenma Air Base and undid the permit granted by his predecessor.  The central government in Tokyo backs the US plan and says Onaga's decision changes nothing.

Prosecutors in the southern US state of Georgia filed terrorism and gang crime charges against a group of white men and women who flew confederate flags and spouted racial abuse at the birthday party for a 10-year old African American child.  The incident took place near Atlanta in July.  The rednecks went on a tear because they were angry over the decision of several southern politicians to remove the garish and treasonous standard over its link to racism; specifically, the murders of nine African Americans in a church basement by a scrawny racist coward with a gun.