- Between laughs and 'disaster', Trump divides Davos
- Hundreds of people protest ahead of Swiss Davos meeting
- US falling behind on wind power, think tank warns
- US news giant CNN eyes 200 job cuts, streaming overhaul
- Rubio chooses Central America for first trip amid Panama Canal pressure
- Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally falters, oil slumps
- Trump tells Davos elites: produce in US or pay tariffs
- Progressive politics and nepo 'babies': five Oscar takeaways
- American Airlines shares fall on lackluster 2025 profit outlook
- France to introduce new sex education guidelines in schools
- Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally falters
- Drinking water in many French cities contaminated: study
- After Musk gesture, activists project 'Heil' on Tesla plant
- ICC prosecutor seeks arrest of Taliban leaders over persecution of women
- Syria's economy reborn after being freed from Assad
- Shoppers unaware as Roman tower lurks under French supermarket
- Stocks mainly rise after Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally
- Singer Chris Brown sues Warner Bros for $500 mn over documentary
- J-pop star Nakai to retire after sexual misconduct allegations
- Leaky, crowded and hot: Louvre boss slams her own museum
- WWF blasts Sweden, Finland over logging practices
- How things stand in China-US trade tensions with Trump 2.0
- Most Asian markets rise after Wall Street's AI-fuelled rally
- Fire-hit Hollywood awaits Oscar nominees, with 'Emilia Perez' in front
- New rider in town: Somalia's first woman equestrian turns heads
- Most Asian markets extend AI-fuelled rally
- Bangladesh student revolutionaries' dreams dented by joblessness
- Larry Ellison, tech's original maverick, makes Trump era return
- Political crisis hits South Korea growth: central bank
- Photonis Launches Two Market-Leading Solutions to Advance Single Photon Detection and Imaging Applications
- Les Paul owned by guitar god Jeff Beck auctioned for over £1 mn
- Musk bashes Trump-backed AI mega project
- Does China control the Panama Canal, as Trump claims?
- Yemen's Huthis say freed detained ship's crew after Gaza truce
- Mel B, Trump and Milei: What happened at Davos Wednesday
- Argentina's Milei says would leave Mercosur for US trade deal
- Fashion world 'afraid' of Trump, says Van Beirendonck
- P&G sees China improvement but consumers 'still struggling'
- Stock markets mostly higher as they track Trump plans, earnings
- Anti-Semitic acts at 'historic' highs in France despite 2024 fall: council
- Trump's meme coin venture sparks backlash
- Global green energy push likely to continue despite Trump climate retreat: UN
- Prince Harry settles lawsuit against Murdoch's UK tabloids
- Stock markets diverge tracking Trump plans
- Sudan 'political' banknote switch causes cash crunch
- Masa Son, Trump's Japanese buddy with the Midas Touch
- Borussia Dortmund sack coach Nuri Sahin after Champions League setback
- 'Love for humanity': Low-crime Japan's unpaid parole officers
- Brazil saw 79% jump in area burned by fires in 2024: monitor
- No home, no insurance: The double hit from Los Angeles fires
Teen pilot completes round-the-world feat
Beaming and waving her arms in the air, teenage pilot Zara Rutherford was euphoric Thursday after completing a solo, round-the-world flying odyssey with the dream of getting into the record books.
"It was very difficult but very rewarding," confessed the 19-year-old Belgian-British sensation who can claim to being the youngest woman to have circumnavigated the globe alone in a cockpit.
She touched down at an airfield outside the Belgian town of Kortrijk, welcomed by a crowd of journalists, well-wishers and family just over five months after she set off on 18 August, 2021.
"It's very strange being back here," she told a media conference, adding that, after an epic journey with stops in nearly 30 countries, she was looking forward to putting her feet up for a while in just one place.
"I'd like to do nothing next week," she laughed. "It was harder than I imagined."
Rutherford -- whose both parents are pilots and her father flew for Britain's air force -- field questions in English, French and Dutch.
She explained that Russia's vast, frozen expanse of Siberia was the "scariest" leg of her journey: a place of overwhelming distance between habitations, and where the temperature fell below minus 30 degrees Celsius (-22 degrees Fahrenheit).
"I'd be going hundreds and hundreds of kilometres without seeing anything human -- I mean no electricity cables, no roads, no people -- and I thought 'if the engine stopped now I'd have a really big problem'," she said.
- 'Pretty nerve-wracking' -
Navigating the world in a tiny, 325-kilogramme (717-pound) Shark UL single-propellor plane, loaned to her under a sponsorship deal, meant she had to skirt around clouds and could not fly at night.
The restrictions meant many times she had to divert or make hasty landings -- including taking to ground quickly early this month, just a short distance from Dubai, to avoid getting caught in the first thunderstorm that city had seen in two years.
There was also a long three-week stretch for most of November in a Russian eastern coastal town called Ayan where she could not take off because of the weather, relying on kind locals who were "very willing to help with anything I might need".
She did not escape the Covid pandemic and related restrictions, either.
China barred her from its airspace because of virus curbs, "which meant I had to do a huge detour to avoid North Korea -- and that took six hours over water," she said. "That was a pretty nerve-wracking experience."
She was subjected to PCR tests "all the time" to get clearance, and "Asia was extremely strict, so I had to make sure that I had to stay in hotels".
But the 52,000-kilometre (32,000-mile) trip, tracked on her website and caught on cameras she took with her, also brought its share of unique experiences.
They included flying around the Statue of Liberty and seeing a SpaceX launch in California, soaring above Saudi Arabia's "diverse" landscape, stopping in Colombia, seeing an isolated house on its Icelandic island, and powering along "beautiful" Bulgarian valleys.
- 'Do something crazy' -
"I've been through some stuff," Rutherford said, adding: "So many countries, so many kilometres, but every single one was amazing."
"It will be very strange to not have to fly every single day anymore -- or try to fly every single day," she said.
"I'm just happy to finally be in the same spot for, you know, a few months hopefully."
Rutherford is not the youngest to have flown around the world solo. That title goes to an 18-year-old Briton, Travis Ludlow, who completed his feat in July last year.
But, once confirmed by Guinness World Records, she assumes the title of the youngest woman to do so, displacing a US pilot of Afghan origin, Shaesta Waiz, who circumnavigated the planet in 2017, aged 29.
More than that, though, she said her feat is a tribute to seizing hold of dreams and making them happen, saying she had to get past her initial fears that her goal would be "too expensive, too dangerous, too complicated".
In sum, she said, "I want to encourage people to do something crazy with their lives -- to go for it".
H.Meyer--CPN