Our top stories include:
Canada's national police say that the government must do more to stop homegrown radicals.
“Terrorism is a serious crime with harsh penalties and we must be sure that our pursuit of justice is based on evidence which will support prosecutions, secure convictions and bring eventual penalties”.
China mulls eliminating the death penalty for nine non-violent crimes.
“It defines three kinds of sentences for those whose conduct results in serious consequences to society. Violators may even face the death penalty if their behavior brings massive losses to the country or the public."
British Prime Minister David Cameron says there is "no pressing need" for his country to pay a European Union bill of 2.1 billion euros.
“We are not paying two billion euros on the 1st of December and we are not paying, let me finish, and we are not paying a sum anything like that, that is very clear."
And China has started delivery of a third batch of supplies to West Africa to help with the fight against Ebola.
"This batch of supplies includes mainly protective suits, safety goggles, nebulizers and clinical thermometers.”
Those stories and more over the hour and towards the end of the show we'll be looking at comments online about whether or not China should have a easily identifiable outfit that represents the country.
First up, in Asia,
In South Korea, prosecutors are seeking the death penalty for the captain of the Sewol ferry, which sank in April killing more than 300 people.
In North Korea, Japanese officials are in Pyongyang to discuss the investigations into the abductions of Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 1980s. It marks the first time in a decade that Tokyo has dispatched a delegation to North Korea on this issue.
In Oceania,
In Australia, a fragment of ancient Australia has been found under Vanuatu in the South Pacific, raising questions about how continents are formed.
Staying in the country, an Australian teenage runaway, dubbed the Ginger Jihadist by the media, has been featured in a second Islamic State propaganda video. He appeared in his first Islamic State video last week warning that the movement won't stop fighting until the extremists' notorious black flag is flying above every nation.
Moving on to Africa,
In South Africa, police have launched a major manhunt to find the killers of national football captain, shot dead by suspected burglars.
In Nigeria, Boko Haram gunmen kidnapped at least 30 boys and girls from a village in northeast Nigeria during the weekend.
And in the Middle East,
In Iraq, at least 34 people have been killed and dozens injured following two bomb blasts in and around Iraq's capital Baghdad.
In Syria, Al-Qaeda-affiliated militants and other Syrian rebel groups have attacked the government-held city of Idlib, briefly seizing several official buildings.
Looking to Latin America,
In Haiti, thousands of Haitians have marched in the capital in protest at a delay in the country's legislative and municipal elections.
In Cuba, the government has approved the construction of the country's first new Catholic Church in 55 years.
And in Europe,
In Ukraine, the president and prime minister are set to publish a draft coalition agreement, after an apparent victory for pro-Western parties in Sunday's parliamentary elections.
In Hungary, thousands of protesters in the capital Budapest have demanded a halt to a proposed law which would place a tax on internet use.
And finally in North America,
In the U.S., a second pupil has died of her wounds after a Washington state high school student opened fire before shooting himself.
In Mexico, an interim governor has been appointed in the Mexican state of Guerrero, where 43 students went missing after clashes with police a month ago.