A world microlight champion says he still hopes to be the first to make a solo round-the-world flight after being forced down by Chinese warplanes.
Published:
24 June 2000 y., Saturday
The incident happened at about 0700 BST on Friday as Colin Bodill was flying from Hanoi, Vietnam, to Hong Kong during his attempt to fly 23,000 miles around the globe within 90 days.
He was blown 100 miles off course into what appeared to be a military area and Chinese Air Force warplanes were scrambled to order him to land.
Mr Bodill, 49, of Nottingham, is in police custody in Zhanjiang, in the Guangdong province, but he is not under arrest. A Foreign Office spokesman said staff at the British Embassy in Beijing and the Consulate-General in Zhanjiang were working with the Chinese authorities to secure his release.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Another Estonian soldier has been killed in Iraq, according to the Estonian Ministry of Defense
more »
Ukraine braces for heated vote as Russia, West watches anxiously
more »
Poland is organising a fair of its own kind that is sure to raise eyebrows
more »
10th Anniversary Azerbaijan Exhibition "BakuTel" took place in Baku (Azerbaijan).
more »
European Union ministers meeting in Luxembourg have approved a new five-year framework aimed at co-ordinating policies on asylum and immigration
more »
Algeria opposes a proposal by some EU countries to set up holding centres in North Africa to halt the flow of illegal immigrants to the European Union
more »
Bribery of officials most common in oil-producing countries
more »
One Of European Coalition "Free Belarus" Leaders and Zubr Coordinator Arrested
more »
Most oil-producing nations are rife with corruption, and oil companies should provide more information about their operations to help clean up the market
more »
The president of the Supreme Court in Georgia’s breakaway republic of Abkhazia resigned Monday after coming under pressure
more »