Hello Australia! - French warplanes conduct a second round of Airstrikes in Raqqa - France is trying to build an even bigger coalition to fight Islamic State - Malcolm and Barack talk counter-terrorism - And more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and US President Barack Obama hold their first official formal bilateral meeting at the APEC summit in Manila, and the terrorist attacks in Paris will top their agenda.  In fact, much of what was supposed to be an economic summit will now be re-purposed to discuss counter-terrorism.  PM Turnbull and Mr. Obama already had quick talks at the G20 meeting in Turkey earlier. Australia is part of the US-led coalition conducting airstrikes against Islamic state in Syria and Iraq.

France is asking the US and Russia to put aside their differences and coordinate their efforts in an even broader international force to "destroy" Islamic State. "We're not engaged in a war of civilizations, because these assassins do not represent any.  We are in a war against jihadist terrorism which is threatening the whole world," French President Francois Hollande told a joint session of Parliament.  Hollande plans to present lawmakers with a bill to extend the state of emergency by three months, and is seeking new powers to strip French nationality of dual citizens who threaten France's safety; increase surveillance; and to use "more sophisticated methods" to curb weapons trafficking.

US Secretary of State John Kerry will meet with the French President on Tuesday.  Earlier in Paris, Mr. Kerry said that the US stands "shoulder to shoulder" with France against the "psychopathic monsters" of Islamic State.  129 people and seven terrorists died in Friday's attacks in Paris.  Authorities now say 430 people were injured as a result of the attacks, significantly raising that number.

France early Tuesday conducted more airstrikes in Raqqa, the city in northern Syrian that serves as the administrative center for Islamic State.  So far, officials say the raid destroyed a command facility and a training center.  Back home, French police are still hunting for Salah Abdeslam, believed to be the eighth attacker.  Reports he had been detained during a raid in the Belgian town of Molenbeek turned out to be false.  Cops have carried out more than 150 raids in France and Belgium, confiscating cash and weapons including a rocket launcher.

The mining company Samarco - co-owned by Australia's BHP-Billiton - will pay more than A$366 Million in compensation for the dam burst in Brazil that buried the town of Bento Rodrigues, in the south-eastern state of Minas Gerais.  Eleven people were killed and 12 are missing, presumed dead.

Guinea has released its last known Ebola patient from a treatment center in the capital Conraky.  Guinea was the first nation to chart infections in the West African Ebola Epidemic, which killed more than 11,300 people - 2,536 in Guinea.  If no new cases are reported in the next six weeks, Guinea will be delcared Ebola-free.

The versatile Indian actor Saeed Jaffrey is dead at age 86.  In a career that stretched from Bollywood to Broadway, he's best known to Western audiences for: playing Billy Fish in 1975's "The Man Who Would Be King" opposite Sean Connery and Michael Caine; Indian politician Sardar Patel in the 1982 film epic Gandhi; the 1985 critics' favorite "My Beautiful Launderette"; TV's "Jewel in the Crown" and "Far Pavilions"; among many,many others.

In stupid America, Texas police arrested a man for murdering six people including a six-year old boy at a camp site.  Problem is, William Mitchell Hudson isn't cooperating and so police haven't determined his motive.  Cops found one female survivor at the side of the road near a property near the town of Palestine where the group was camping.  She led them to two bodies in their camper van.  Cops found the other four in Hudson's pond next door.