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Round-the-world gyrocopter attempt falters in face of Russian bureaucracy

Norman Surplus, 48, from Northern Ireland, fears the long wait for permission to fly to Vladivostok may ruin his plans See our interactive map of the route He has flown 13,000 miles across 18 countries, passing over sandstorms and forest fires and surviving a crash landing that left him upside down in a lake. But now it seems a Northern Irish man’s attempt to become the first person to circumnavigate the globe in a gyrocopter may be foiled by an even greater obstacle: Russian bureaucracy. Norman Surplus, 48, set out from a playing field in his home town of Larne in March last year expecting his journey across Europe, north Africa, the Middle East, Asia and North America to take about four months. Those plans went awry, however, when his open-cockpit craft veered into a lake shortly after takeoff in Thailand. Two mechanics had to be sent from the UK for repairs and it was three months before the Briton was off again. He then got stuck in the Philippines for 11 months waiting for a permit to fly across Japan. Surplus took up his journey once more this summer and arrived in Tsruoaka on the west coast of Japan six weeks ago. He applied to Russian authorities for permission to fly the 530 miles to Vladivostok after having received a preliminary green light from Moscow last year, but has received no reply. “It’s extremely frustrating,” he said in a telephone interview from his hotel room. “The winter is approaching fast and there’s not much wiggle room. If I don’t get the go-ahead in the next few days then it will be too late.” He added: “It seems we have been referred for approvals from one department to another, to another, all of whom appear to start the whole procedure again from scratch each time.” Surplus, who runs his own wind turbine repair company, said he had requested to fly from Vladivostok up Russia’s Pacific coastline to the Arctic region of Chukotka and then across the Bering Strait to Alaska. Fuel dumps have already been prepared along the route. Aleksandr Lameko, a Russian pilot who is helping Surplus negotiate with Russian authorities, said he feared the Briton’s request would be refused altogether. Despite an initial indication that all would be fine, aviation authorities have passed the application to the ministry of defence and the federal security service (FSB). “The FSB called me and gave the impression they didn’t want to help,” said Lameko. “I told them it would be a great shame if the expedition was ended by Russia after 18 countries. “I said to them: ‘This is the 21st century and you don’t need to look for spies in every corner.’ They just started saying it was a restricted zone, and what if he falls in the taiga. I’m afraid the answer will probably be a resolute no, unless some high-up official sees this will be bad PR for Russia and decides to step in.” Surplus cannot fly directly to Alaska from Japan because the gyrocopter – a low altitude rotorcraft – has a maximum range of 600 miles. The trip has not been without its difficulties. After plunging into the lake in Thailand he was briefly trapped, “as if in a capsized canoe. My first thought underwater was, ‘Oh, you pillock,’ and only then did I think how to get out,” he said. In Saudi Arabia, Surplus got caught between two storms and had to land at an isolated petrol station in the desert. Two pump attendants and a camel watched dumbstruck as he taxied up the slip road. The gyrocopter runs on ordinary unleaded petrol so he was able to fill up. Most dramatic was flying over forest fires on the border between Thailand and Burma. “The flames were licking up the trees below,” he recalled. “I could smell smoke and leaf litter was fluttering up around me.” Russia Northern Ireland Europe Tom Parfitt guardian.co.uk

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Rupert Murdoch receives $12.5m bonus

News Corp chief’s total pay package soars 47% to $33m, while his son James lands $6m bonus to hit total of almost $18m The News Corporation chairman and chief executive, Rupert Murdoch, received a $12.5m (£7.7m) cash bonus for the last financial year, while his total remuneration rose 47% year on year to $33m, according to the company’s annual statement to shareholders. His son James Murdoch – who is chairman and chief executive of News Corporation in Europe and Asia – also benefited handsomely, with a $6m cash bonus taking his total remuneration to almost $18m – a 74% rise on his 2010 take-home pay. The bonuses were for the year to the end of June, during which News Corporation became mired in the phone-hacking scandal that engulfed the News of the World. The affair only escalated into a full-blown corporate crisis, with the closure of the News of the World and several executive resignations, in July, shortly after the end of News Corp’s 2010/11 financial year. Chase Carey, News Corp’s chief operating officer and Murdoch’s right-hand man, took home $30m in the year to 30 June, including a $10m bonus. Roger Ailes, who runs Fox News, received a slight increase in total compensation in 2011, up to $15.5m from $13.9m in 2010. Ailes received a $1.5m cash bonus. The Murdochs’ remuneration was revealed in their report to shareholders ahead of the News Corp annual general meeting on 21 October. News Corp also announced on Friday that two of its longest-serving directors are to leave. Ken Crowley, a trusted lieutenant for more than 50 years, will leave the News Corp board of directors he joined in 1979 when Murdoch, the chairman and chief executive, established the global holding company for his media businesses. Thomas Perkins, a partner of private investment firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers and member of the News Corp board since 1996, will also step down after the media group’s AGM next month. Jim Breyer, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist and one of the first investors in Facebook, will join the News Corp board in October. •

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US unemployment figures shock with no job growth in August

Analysts expected at least 75,000 new jobs to have been created in the US last month No new jobs were added to the US workforce in August, fuelling fears that the world’s largest economy is heading back into recession. Analysts expected at least 75,000 new jobs to have been created in the US last month, but the figure came in at zero, sparking further falls on stock markets around the world. The FTSE 100, down around 85 points ahead of the figures, tumbled almost 140 points, to 5278, down more than 2.5%. The Dow Jones opened more than 200 points lower at 11,290, a drop of 1.75%. Gold and German bonds, considered safe havens among increasingly nervous investors, made strong gains after figures showed US jobs growth ground to a halt in August. Gold jumped by 3%, to $1876 an ounce. The US economy needs to add around 150,000 to 200,000 new jobs each month to bring the jobless rate down. It remained at 9.1% last month. The US labour department said it was the weakest reading since last September, with firms holding off hiring after recent declines in consumer and business confidence. President Obama, due to deliver a speech on employment next Thursday, is expected to come under further pressure to stimulate the economy, which has retrenched since the end of last year when growth averaged above 3%. Figures for the second quarter revealed a sharp slowdown to 1% growth. A strike by Verizon workers distorted the August figures, which showed a 48,000 decline in the number of workers in the information services sector, but that was offset by a downward revision of 58,000 to figures for July and June. Rob Carnell, chief international economist at ING, said the figures would provide further ammunition for those arguing for further policy easing. The Federal Reserve is due to discuss the possible reintroduction of quantitative easing at its next meeting later this month. Carnell said it would be difficult to boost consumer demand while the figures showed real wage growth stalling. “If there are any glimmers of hope in this survey, and basically there aren’t, you could point to the smaller decline in the government sector as a potential slowing of public sector job shedding. You could also assume that this will have bolstered the chances of a new round of quantitative easing from the Fed before the year end,” he said. US unemployment and employment data Economics US economy Global economy Phillip Inman guardian.co.uk

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A 45-year-old Indiana grandfather has been charged with child abuse after trying to toughen up his three grandsons with brutal hikes in the Grand Canyon, according to park rangers. He was busted after rangers and tourists observed him abusing the boys, ages 12, 9, and 8, MSNBC reports. The boys…

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Lindsay Lohan has a lengthy, wordy new tattoo on her rib cage, and a source says that’s a good thing. It proves she’s focused, see? Lilo has tatted the lyrics “Clear as a crystal sharp as a knife/I feel like I’m in the prime of my life,” from fellow Long…

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It was like a Cheech & Chong dream come true: A truck carrying a huge load of marijuana overturned at a busy intersection in San Jose yesterday, spilling large bags of weed across the road. As the driver fled, motorists and pedestrians made off with most of the marijuana, the…

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UN peacekeepers routinely pressured underage girls for sex in exchange for food and shelter in the Ivory Coast, according to explosive new Wikileaks information uncovered in US diplomatic cables. A UN spokesman has confirmed that 10 commanders and 6 soldiers from Benin were repatriated to their African nation from their…

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Darling: Blair said working with Brown was like dental treatment without anaesthetic

Darling to attack Gordon Brown as ‘brutal’ and label Bank of England chief Mervyn King ‘exasperating’ in memoirs Alistair Darling will claim in his memoirs that Tony Blair found Gordon Brown so difficult to work with that Blair told him “dealing with GB is like having dental treatment with no anaesthetic”. More details of Darling’s attacks on Brown are contained in fresh leaks of his memoirs to the Guardian. Darling, who was chancellor of the exchequer under Gordon Brown as the financial crisis struck Britain, paints a picture of top officials and his senior colleagues as out of touch, aloof, with the upper echelons of government so dysfunctional one top official is accused of trying to undermine the prime minister. In the book, to be published next week, called Back From the Brink, Darling reveals: • Shouting matches between him and Brown over the need for spending cuts as the United Kingdom’s finances plunged into the red. • That as the banking crisis started, King referred to panicked Northern Rock depositors trying to get their money out, and admitted: “I bitterly regret not thinking of these issues sooner – I should have done so.” • That he found Bank of England governor Mervyn King “impish” as well as “amazingly stubborn and exasperating”. • That Darling’s position became so difficult as he repeatedly clashed with the PM, that his wife joked he was like the Nazi prisoner Rudolph Hess, holed up in a prison on his own. • How a Treasury civil servant attended a meeting where he told Brown that his solutions to the economic crisis were doomed to fail; the mandarin, writes Darling, spent the meeting “languidly peeling an apple with his Swiss army knife”. As well as King and Brown, Darling criticises a host of senior political figures for the economic crisis, and bankers such as Royal Bank of Scotland chief executive Fred Goodwin, but it is unclear if the former chancellor will use his memoir to accept any of the blame himself. In earlier leaks , Darling has accused Brown of having a “volcanic temper”, and of presiding over a “fairly brutal regime”, with one top Brown adviser accused of wanting “blood on the carpet, preferably that of her own colleagues”. Describing a shouting match with Brown over the PM’s resistance to spending cuts, Darling says: “Speaking truth to power never came into it.” Blaming Brown for hampering efforts to tackle the economic crisis, Darling claims that Tony Blair told him that “dealing with GB [Gordon Brown] is like having dental treatment with no anaesthetic”. It is arguably one of the most barbed comments to emerge from the Blair-Brown feud that dominated Labour’s time in office from 1997 to its election defeat in 2010. But as well as his boss, Darling says that Nicholas Macpherson, a top Treasury civil servant, held a meeting where Brown was present, while “languidly peeling an apple with his Swiss army knife”. As options were discussed to rescue Britain’s ailing economy, Mcpherson, Darling claims, told Brown his ideas would not work. The former chancellor claims this resistance was part of a row over Brown’s plan to put Sir Gus O’Donnell in charge of the Treasury and the Cabinet Office. Publishers Atlantic Books have denounced earlier leaks that appeared on the Labour Uncut website: “Following recent media speculation about Back from the Brink, the forthcoming memoir by Alistair Darling, Atlantic Books would like to state that the reports of the book’s contents do not fully and fairly represent the author’s views as expressed in the book. “Back from the Brink: 1,000 Days at Number 11, will be published by Atlantic Books on Wednesday 7th September and is strictly embargoed until then.” In earlier leaks Darling told how he resisted Brown’s attempts to demote him, and how the government had wanted to oust King from the Bank of England. Alistair Darling Tony Blair Gordon Brown Labour Politics Vikram Dodd guardian.co.uk

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The Virginia city where Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson are buried has approved a proposal to limit the flying of Confederate flags. Lexington’s city council voted 4-1 in favor of allowing only the Virginia, US, and city flags to be flown from light poles on a bridge and on…

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After more than a year in a Peruvian jail, Joran Van Der Sloot has been formally charged with the murder of a young woman found dead in his hotel room. Prosecutors, who say the Dutchman bludgeoned to death 21-year-old Stephany Flores in a rage after she discovered his link to…

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