Our top stories are:
US President Barack Obama tries to restore trust in policing following the Ferguson issue.
"I think there is a maturity of the conversation right now that can lead us to actually get some concreate results."
China is implementing new regulations on family foster care.
"Foster care is to provide a better living condition for the children, to find a home for them."
Russia drops South Stream gas pipeline project.
"I think the attitude of European Union about this issue is negative. They didn't help in any way for this project to happen but instead they blocked it. "
And Hong Kong government condemns illegal acts of violent radicals.
"Their actions are not allowed by any government, and not what the public want to see as well."
Those stories and more over the hour and towards the end of the show we'll be looking at comments online about Beijing to fine beggars on the subway.
Now our headlines for global survey
First up, in Asia,
In Afghanistan, NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said on Monday that NATO will launch a non-combat mission in Afghanistan on the first of January in 2015.
In South Korea, a fishing ship sank in the Bering Sea, leaving at least one person dead and 52 missing.
In Oceania,
In Australia, the government will not hold an open tender to replace its ageing Collins-class submarines, a decision that bolsters Japan's position as the likely builder of the new multibillion-dollar fleet.
Staying in the country, the Senate is due to consider legislation tightening on its asylum seeker laws, despite the UN expressing strong concerns.
Moving on to Africa,
In Namibia, the country's ruling party cruised to victory in the 2014 presidential election with Prime Minister Hage Geingob taking 86.73 percent of all declared votes
In Nigeria, Boko Haram launched two separate attacks in two state capitals, when two female suicide bombers hit a busy market and fighters launched a major assault on police.
And in the Middle East,
In Iran, the country will convert more of its higher-grade enriched uranium into reactor fuel under an extended nuclear deal, making the material less suitable for building atomic bombs.
In Syria, the chief investigator pursuing Alois Brunner, one of the world's most wanted German Nazi war criminals, said that he died four years ago in Syria.
Looking to Latin America,
In Colombia, President Juan Manuel Santos says he wants the armed forces to explain how a general was kidnapped by Farc rebels.
In Peru, a key UN climate meeting has opened with negotiators attempting to advance a new global climate deal to be signed at the end of 2015.
And in Europe,
Former Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk took over as president of the European Council of EU leaders, promising strong leadership in foreign policy.
In the Netherlands, wreckage of MH17 recovered from its crash site in eastern Ukraine will be reassembled for an investigation at a military base.
And in France, lawmakers are set to vote urging the government to recognize Palestinian state.
And finally in North America,
In the U.S., officials have warned military personnel that IS forces may be planning attacks against them at home.
In Canada, new criminal law provisions, together with 20 million US dollars, aim to help victims leave prostitution.
Those were our global survey headlines.
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Now we're going back to the top story of the day. LK starts us off.