| 27th
November : 'True Friend' Sir Richard
Praised By Jet Skier Wife. |
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Sir Richard Branson has
proved "a true friend" to the wife of missing South
Yorkshire jet ski ace Jeremy Hoyland.
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Jacqui Hoyland, aged 44, says
the billionaire adventurer has been in regular contact with her and is
using his influence and resources to assist in her desperate search
for 41-year-old husband who disappeared off the coast of Bali.
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The mum-of-two from Talbot
Road, Penistone, said Sir Richard was helping her obtain information
from Vodafone which would pinpoint her husband's location when he made
his last two mobile phone calls while adrift after his machine broke
down as he returned to Tanjung Benoa beach.
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The tycoon is also pressuring
the UK Government to throw resources behind her search and has even
assigned an employee to work with her.
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Jacqui said Sir Richard was
helping her because he had faced danger on the seas himself - only
last month he had to pull out of an attempt to break a trans-Atlantic
sailing record due to bad weather.
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And he was appalled at the
lack of help from the Government, she added.
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She said: "Sir Richard
is proving to be a true friend, and his help points up the total lack
of interest from ministers.
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"There is still a chance
Jeremy is alive, and I keep telling the girls there's a chance until
we find something to suggest otherwise - even though each day that
chance gets slimmer and slimmer."
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The couple have two children,
Georgia, 11, and Ellena, 13.
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The ex-Penistone Grammar
School pupil was with three friends when he went missing in choppy
water.
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He made two phone calls to a
pal in Sheffield, the first to say his jet ski was having problems,
then that it was taking on water.
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He has not been seen since.
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Jacqui said she had spoken to
one of the jetskiers who was with Jeremy on the water, pal Peter De
Smet from Belgium.
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Mr De Smet raised the alarm
when he returned to shore after a fruitless search for Jeremy in
choppy water. But it was about two hours before a helicopter reached
the scene, Jacqui said.
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She said: "He could have
drifted hundreds of miles, perhaps even to Australia.
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"Jeremy is a survivor
and I won't stop until I've found him, whatever the outcome.
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"We are a family and we
will stick together through this because we have to.
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Nothing is going to stop us,
but it's the not knowing that makes it harder."
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Jeremy has more than 10 years
experience as a jet skier and is also an experienced administrator.
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TheStar.co.uk
|
| 24th
November : Wife's Appeal For Missing Jetskier. |
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Michelle May, North of
England correspondent
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The Wife of a British
jetskier has made a desperate appeal for expert help in finding him a
month after he went missing in Indonesia.
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Air-sea searches for Jeremy
Hoyland have covered hundreds of square miles but he has not been seen
since October 24 when his jetski failed two miles off Bali.
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His wife, Jacqui, told Sky
News online:
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"We really need someone
who has a specific knowledge of the ocean currents in the area.
Perhaps someone who has retired or perhaps someone in the military can
help us try to refine the search."
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Mr Hoyland made several calls
for help from his mobile phone before the battery ran flat.
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The last thing he said to
rescue teams was "It's getting dark, it's rough and I'm scared…
for God's sake be quick".
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The 41-year-old, from
Penistone in South Yorkshire, has over 10 years' experience as a
jetskier and was acting as race director at the Asian Beach Games.
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His wife is trying to make
contact with the Indonesian Ambassador.
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"This isn't somebody on
holiday who went there and did something stupid," she said.
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"He was invited out
there and I feel that the authorities haven't done all they can."
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South Yorkshire Police is
liaising with the Balinese authorities and Sir Richard Branson has
been helping towards the cost of helicopter hire.
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Mrs Hoyland is raising funds
to return to Bali and says that she is still waiting for a response to
an appeal letter sent to the Prime Minister two weeks ago.
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At home she is staying
positive for the sake of her two daughters, 13-year-old Elena and
Georgia, 11.
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"It's very quiet without
Jeremy," she said.
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She went on: "We need
expert help...
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With no sign of any wreckage,
there is no reason to believe that any real harm has come to him.
He'll find fresh water and he'll find fruit. He'll manage - I just
know it."
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Sky
News
|
| 19th
November : Jeremy Is So Proud Of Being British... But Where
Is His Country When He Needs It? |
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By Sheena Hastings
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When life is normal, with
everything and everybody more or less getting on with business as
usual, time flies by.
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When someone goes missing,
life is thrown right out of kilter and nothing can assume its normal
rhythm; every hour that person is absent hangs heavily.
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For Jacqui Hoyland, there
have been almost four weeks of that dragging weight of time.
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Jacqui is nothing if not a
realist.
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She knows the phone could
ring with the terrible news she is trying her darndest not to imagine,
and she makes a point of saying, twice, that with every passing day
she knows the chances of her husband Jeremy being found alive are a
little slimmer.
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Knowing that everyone she has
asked for help is doing their best would make her feel a lot better.
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But the fact is that, since a
few days after Jeremy Hoyland's disappearance in the Indian Ocean on
October 24, she and her family feel they've have had precious little
help from those best placed to offer it.
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She's frustrated and says,
rather bitterly, that her family are not important enough for someone
somewhere to flick a switch that would throw all the resources of
Army, Navy and Air Force plus all the technology 21st century science
can offer at the task.
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Her 41-year-old husband, an
after-sales service manager for a component company, comes from the
Pennine village of Penistone and lives for his family and his sport.
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"If Gordon Brown went
missing at sea, there'd be such a hue and cry and they'd track him
down in no time," says Jacqui, a European project manager for a
major retailer.
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"He stopped serious
business to comment about that nonsense over Jonathan Ross and Russell
Brand; yet he has not replied to my request for help in finding
Jeremy, sent days ago.
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"Jeremy is a survivor
and I still believe he will be found alive, but time is passing and we
seem to be getting no help from those who could really make a
difference in searching for him.
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Jeremy represents his country
at sport and is fiercely proud of being British, but where is his
country when he needs it?"
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The house is far too quiet,
says Jacqui.
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A bristling forest of jet ski
trophies are there in the living room.
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But the absence of his big,
opinionated personality and the shock of the current situation have
left their home hushed.
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Daughters Elenna, 13, and
Georgia, 11, have been going to school for part of the day.
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In between, Jacqui talks to
the media, talks to Jeremy's brother over in Bali and racks her brains
as to where she can turn next to ask for help.
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The authorities in Indonesia
may have given up, but she and the family see every reason to hope.
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When Jacqui met Jeremy 18
years ago at a Young Farmers' event at the local pub, it took him two
weeks to move from asking for a first date to proposing marriage in
front of all their friends at another Young Farmers' do.
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Quick-moving Jeremy also
liked to ski, and a few years after they married he also took up jet
skiing, learning on the lake at Rother Valley Country Park.
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He bought his own jet ski and
a VW camper for the family to travel with him, and, within three years
was taking part in serious racing events.
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As Jeremy began to win and
climb the rankings, up to 16 members of the family would go along and
to support him.
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Determined, tough and a very
safe skiier who had never suffered a serious injury in 13 years,
no-one was surprised when Jeremy Hoyland became British champion.
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"He is very active in
the sport all year round, and really wants to promote it and improve
its status, hopefully seeing it in the Olympics one day," says
Jacqui.
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"He's also passionate
about making the sport more affordable and accessible, not just an
activity for people with money."
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In the last three years,
Jeremy Hoyland became race director for the Jet Ski Racing Association
of Great Britain, organising events all over the UK.
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He also joined the board of
the International Jet Sport Boating Association.
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He was thrilled when he heard
that the Asian Beach Games, held in Bali in October, was to be the
first official games that included jet skiing.
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He travelled as a race
official to the World Championships in Arizona at the end of
September, then on to Bali for the Asian Beach Games, starting on
October 19.
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"It was the longest he'd
ever been away from home," say Jacqui. "He rang every day,
and said how much he missed us. He's a real family man."
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On Friday, October 24, Jeremy
and other race official colleagues had some hours free before a race
later in the day.
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Jeremy was concerned about an
endurance race the next day, which involved riders crossing to Nusa
Lembongan, an island 15 miles away, circling the island, and returning
to Bali.
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He and the others set out to
test the exact distance and time across the choppy channel, making
time along the way for
snorkelling.
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When the party set off back
to Bali, riding a swell of 10-15 feet, they hadn't gone far when
Jeremy noticed that his colleague Bob Crabtree was having difficulties
some distance behind him.
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He dropped back to help,
while the others sped on. Fifteen minutes after the rest of the party
safely landed, Bob arrived and said he had not seen Jeremy.
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"My understanding of
events is that the others were sure Jeremy would turn up in time for
the start of the afternoon's race at 4pm, but he didn't arrive,"
says Jacqui.
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"He had his phone and
tried to get through to Peter, a colleague on the beach, but failed.
So he rang Jet Shed, the company in Sheffield who supply jet skis and
parts. He knew they had Peter's number.
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"He told them he was in
trouble about two miles away from Bali and two miles south of where he
had been. He couldn't see land, or he would have swum, as he's a very
strong swimmer.
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His jet-ski wouldn't sink, as
the hull is filled with foam, so he would stay with it. He had red and
yellow flags for emergency use, and was lying in the water with the
flags outstretched."
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At around 4.30pm, a sea and
air rescue helicopter was sent out from Bali, but Jacqui thinks this
crucial first search was carried out in the wrong area.
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In total, Jeremy made eight
phone calls in the hour-and-a-half after his disappearance, then the
phone battery must have given out.
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Jacqui was flying back from a
business trip to Germany while this drama was unfolding.
Two-and-a-half hours after the search had been called off for the
night because the helicopter had no lights on it, she heard that her
husband was missing.
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"I was so upset, and
even more upset that he was now going to be 12 hours alone in the
water with no-one searching until daylight, but I reckoned that if
anyone can survive it's Jeremy.
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I went and told his parents,
Judith and Peter, and his brother, Nicholas. They were devastated.
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"I then got ready to go
to Bali, and was already travelling to Heathrow when a Foreign Office
phone call came to tell me that a report had come through that the
Navy were believed to have found Jeremy.
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It turned out that all that
had been found was a big lump of debris."
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Jacqui had also contacted
South Yorkshire Police, and asked them to request information from
Vodaphone on Jeremy's whereabouts when he made the last phone call.
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In almost a month the
information hasn't been forthcoming, she says, even with the help of
Sir Richard Branson, who travelled to Bali to talk to local officials
and also paid $2,500 for hire of a helicopter.
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Vodaphone now say they are
working with local operators to get hold of the data.
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Jacqui spent 10 days in Bali
with Jeremy's brother Nicholas. The Balinese authorities sent
helicopters up for five days to comb roughly the same area of around
20 miles diameter, says Jacqui.
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"After that, I paid for
a helicopter search across a wider area and to leaflet the many small
islands and fishing boats, offering a $10,000 reward to anyone who
found him.
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The authorities over there
clearly don't have a plan for such situations, and our Foreign Office
doesn't have any contingency, either.
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"They haven't put me in
touch with anyone who can help. There are hundreds of little islands
around there, and he could have washed up on any of them. Many of them
are covered in jungle, so he'd probably be okay for food, but it would
be quite difficult to see him.
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"We need to find people
who know how to organise this kind of search, and understand the
movements of the ocean to figure out which direction he might have
gone in. What we need most urgently is expertise."
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Nicholas Hoyland and a friend
are still in Bali, conducting searches by boat, and the family here
have raised £15,000 so far towards the expenses of the operation.
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Jacqui is obviously immensely
frustrated that the authorities in Indonesia have done so little to
assist someone they invited over to help organise a prestigious event
on the island.
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No-one has taken
responsibility, she says, and she has had little contact from the
Foreign Office.
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"I'd like the Army, Navy
and Air Force to get out there and find him, but I know that's not
realistic.
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But there must be someone
with the right knowledge to help us.. I want to go back to Bali and
find Jeremy, but need a plan and a lot more help first.
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All the locals say 'the
spirits have taken him,' but I don't accept that at all."
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YorkshirePost.co.uk
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| 18th
November : ATP PC Programmable Total Loss System. |
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The
ATP Total loss has been successfully running on skis around the world
for 4 years.
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We
thought it was time, after feedback from users to add some extra
features to our Total Loss system.
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But
first we wanted to be able to fit the ECU into the OEM electric box
before adding any features, this we have now manufactured.
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The
ATP Total Loss is unrivalled in its quality, reliability and
performance tuning capabilities. The new ATP "Flame" Total
loss still uses the same tried, tested, proven components and state of
the art Flash technology as in our previous system.
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We
can program your desired or our recommended timing curves or you can
purchase the optional extra program lead.
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The
programming lead enables the user to accurately set timing, RPM and
rev limiter, the ECU allows two curves (curve A & curve B) to run
entirely separate timings and rev limits.
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These
two curves can be switched between whilst riding with the flick of a
switch on your handle bars.
The programming is really quite easy with group edit options and a
built in help section.
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Features:
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Billet
aluminium ECU, installs into the OEM electric box
Program directly from your laptop to your ECU
Run 2 separate curves side by side
ECU has a built in “Sleep Mode” the unit will turn off when no
engine movement has been detected. Turns on again upon a signal from
engine movement within 2 seconds. Therefore does not require any
external switching on or off. No need to worry about drain on the
battery, the “Sleep Mode” only consumes 8 milliamps
Ignition stops on the stop button, no run on
Uses waterproof connectors
Uses existing OEM wiring harness and connectors alleviating any
installer error problems i.e. bad connections and keeping everything
as waterproof as possible.
No external signs of a Total Loss fitted
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Kit
Includes:
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Pre
programmed (if required) ECU (Brain box) in a sealed Billet aluminium
case. The case is black anodised satin finish and laser
engraved.
Lightweight black anodised flywheel
Stator plate and pick up
Fitting instructions
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Programming
lead is an optional extra. If you do not wish to purchase this ATP
offer the re-programming of curves free of charge to the original
purchaser
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Please
note: Although we have tried to make the installation as simple as
possible it is advised that if you are unsure/don’t feel able to do
this then please contact us for advice on your nearest fitting centre
(if you are too far to come direct to ATP).
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Used
by Recreational, Pro and AM Freestylers and Freeriders alike, equally
amazing on race skis.
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Once
ordered we will contact you for your ski spec and/or preffered timing
curve if necessary.
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Yamaha
SJ 96+
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Please
contact us prior to ordering to discuss your requirements.
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www.airtimeproducts.co.uk
|
| 17th
November : Wife Of British Jet Skier
Who Disappeared In Bali Appeals Directly To Gordon Brown. |
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The wife of a British
champion jet skier who disappeared off Bali more than three weeks ago
has made a direct appeal to Prime Minister Gordon Brown for help.
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Jeremy Hoyland, 41, has not
been seen since he made a mobile phone call on October 24 saying he
was in trouble in the water two miles off the Indonesian island.
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His wife Jacqui, 44, from
Penistone, near Barnsley, South Yorkshire, has criticised the
assistance offered to her family by the British Government and
released the text of a letter she wrote to the Prime Minister a week
ago begging him for help.
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Mrs Hoyland said she had
received no reply from Mr Brown - and had had hardly any contact with
the Foreign and Commonwealth Office since her husband went missing.
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An FCO official at one point
phoned her to say Mr Hoyland's body had been found, only to ring back
three hours later admitting this was a mistake, she said.
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"I am just really
critical of the British Government because absolutely nobody has
stepped forward to help us at all with anything," she said.
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Mrs Hoyland also criticised
her husband's mobile phone provider, Vodafone, for not supplying data
which could show where he was when he made his last call.
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Mrs Hoyland believes her
husband could still be alive on one of the hundreds of uninhabited
islands in the region around Bali.
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She said: "We will not
stop until Jeremy is found, one way or another.
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"But we still believe
that Jeremy is alive because we have no reason at all to believe
otherwise.
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"Until some wreckage is
found to make us think that, then we will still continue to look for
him."
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Mr Hoyland has over 10 years'
experience as a jet skier and is also an experienced administrator of
the sport.
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He was acting as race
director of the jet ski sports event of the Asian Beach Games 2008 in
Bali last month.
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On October 24 he set off with
four friends on borrowed jet skis for the nearby islet of Nusa
Lembongan.
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The group planned to return
to Bali later that day, but Mr Hoyland never arrived.
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He made a series of calls
using his mobile phone, in the last of which he said he was about two
miles off the coast of Bali.
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But no trace of him of his
jet ski have been found, despite a number of searches.
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Mrs Hoyland, who is being
supported by millionaire entrepreneur Richard Branson, flew to Bali to
look for her husband but has since returned to the UK to drum up
support from the British authorities.
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Mr Hoyland's brother
Nicholas, 38, has stayed in Indonesia to work with the local
authorities.
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A Downing Street spokesman
confirmed the letter had been received and said a reply would be sent.
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Vodafone said the case was
complicated because much of the mobile phone data requested would be
held by a third-party network in Indonesia.
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Telegraph.co.uk
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| 11th
November : Jet Skier's Family Raises Search Funds. |
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The family of veteran jet
skier Jeremy Hoyland, who went missing in Bali last month, is raising
funds for another rescue operation, saying they have faith that the
jet-ski race official at the Asian Beach Games is still alive.
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A charity concert was
scheduled to be held at St. John's Junior School in Penistone, UK, on
Wednesday, where Jeremy's daughters Georgia, 11, and Ellena, 13, are
set to sing. Georgia is a student a the school and Ellena used to
study there.
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Their mother Jacqui Hoyland
pledged to continue all attempts to find the father of two young
girls.
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"I have a private
company which will stand *100,000 more and I will spend it all. I will
not stop until I find him.
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I'm a realist, but I have to
know either way. I have to bring him home -- alive or dead. I have to
do that for my daughters at least," Jacqui said earlier this week
as quoted by British daily Yorkshire Post.
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On Oct. 24, 2008, Jeremy went
missing on a jet-ski trip to Tanjung Benoa near Nusa Dua, Bali, from
Nusa Lembongan Island, where he had gone on a borrowed jet ski with
friends before being due to officiate at a race.
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The first ever Asian Beach
Games, from Oct. 18 to Oct. 26, 2008, was attended by at least 3,000
athletes and officials from 43 countries.
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After staying in Bali for 11
days to join the search in Bali, Jacqui reportedly appealed, to no
avail, for help from the UK government to persuade the Indonesian
authorities to act more, after the massive search was called off after
seven days.
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"I only found out at the
weekend that they stopped looking for Jeremy on October 31. I'm
absolutely devastated. I know that if he is alive, Jeremy will not
give in. But I understand that every day that goes by, our chance of
finding him is slipping away," she told the newspaper.
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Bali Search and Rescue (SAR)
team chief Ketut Parwa said standard procedure for locating a missing
person stipulated a seven-day search window, starting from the day the
person was reported missing. He added the team, aided by Indonesian
police, the Military and local residents, had done their utmost during
the search.
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"Our helicopters even
searched all the way to Sumbawa Island, you know, and still we found
nothing. Right now, we are monitoring the radio airwaves and informing
vessels and local residents to report to us or nearby police on any
signs of Jeremy's presence," he told The Jakarta Post on
Tuesday.
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Sumbawa is an island near
Lombok in West Nusa Tenggara Province, east of Bali.
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Parwa said if the family
still wanted to look for Jeremy, they would have to fund the operation
themselves.
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"We cannot take part if
they still want to look for him," he said.
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He added seven helicopters
and four boats had been deployed during the seven-day search. To date,
there are no reports of wreckage from the jet ski.
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The family has set up a
website, jeremyhoylandrescue.myblogsite.com, and a Facebook
account that provide information on donating money and sending
encouraging support messages to the family.
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A post titled "Please
keep Jeremy Hoyland in your prayer" uploaded on www.pwcforums.co.uk,
also invites responses since Jeremy's daughters participate in the
forum.
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"Every night we light
him a candle so he can see his way home," Jacqui said.
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TheJakartaPost.com
|
| 11th
November : I Will Not Rest Until My Jet Skiing Husband Is
Found – Alive or Dead. |
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By Peter Dominiczak
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The wife of a jet skier still
missing in Bali has pledged to continue funding search operations for
as long as it takes to confirm his fate and has already put £10,000
into the hunt.
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Jacqui Hoyland said yesterday
she will not stop looking for her husband even though the authorities
in Bali have given up searching.
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Jeremy Hoyland, 41, from
Penistone, near Barnsley, has not been seen since October 24, when he
went out with four friends on jet skis to the islet of Nusa Lembongan,
off the coast of Bali.
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Now his wife, who has
returned to the UK after 11 days looking for him, is desperately
appealing for help from the Government to help her to persuade the
Indonesian authorities to act.
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The local school attended by
Mr Hoyland's two daughters has organised a charity concert in order to
raise funds to help Mrs Hoyland, who has already spent £10,000 of her
own money on the search.
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She has hired helicopters to
drop leaflets offering a $10,000 reward over remote fishing villages
in the area.
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She said she is convinced her
husband could still be alive and is determined to do whatever it takes
to find some sign of his whereabouts.
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"At the moment, I'm
using family money to keep the search going," she said. "I
have a private company which will stand £100,000 more and I will
spend it all.
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I will not stop until I find
him. I'm a realist, but I have to know either way.
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I have to bring him home –
alive or dead. I have to do that for my daughters at least.
|
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"I desperately need help
and support from the Government, and I haven't got that yet."
|
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Mrs Hoyland said that even
though the authorities in Bali had stopped the search, she was
convinced it was premature as he could have made it to a remote
island.
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She said: "I only found
out at the weekend that they stopped looking for Jeremy on October 31.
I'm absolutely devastated. I know that if he is alive, Jeremy will not
give in. But I understand that every day that goes by, our chance of
finding him are slipping away.
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"They've found no
wreckage, jet skis don't sink and if he's managed to get to an island
somewhere, I know he'll survive.
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"Every night we light
him a candle so he can see his way home."
|
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Tomorrow, a charity concert
will be held at St John's Junior School in Penistone.
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Mr Hoyland's youngest
daughter, Georgia, 11, is a pupil there and will be singing at the
event. His other daughter, Ellena, 13, is a former pupil and will be
at the concert.
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The school's headteacher,
Antoinette Drinkhill, said:
|
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"I think that this will
be so important for the family. It is vital for them to know that
everybody in the community is thinking about them and wants to help
them out."
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Friends of the family said
any money raised at the concert would be funnelled straight into
search operations in Bali.
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Mr Hoyland is a veteran jet
skier and was in Bali as a guest of the Asian Beach Games.
|
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After the trip with his
friends, he had planned to return to Bali's Tanjung Benoa beach a few
hours later to preside over a jet ski race.
|
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He sent a text message from
his mobile phone about five hours after his friends returned to say he
was about two miles from the beach and needed help. Since then, no one
has seen or heard from him.
|
|
Mrs Hoyland has appealed to
local MPs to help publicise her case and Sir Richard Branson has been
in touch with the family to offer his support.
|
|
Tomorrow's concert will take
place at the Paramount Cinema, Penistone on Wednesday 12th November
2.00-3.00pm.
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|
Tickets cost £4 for adults
and £3 for concessions.
|
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All proceeds will go to the
Jeremy Hoyland Rescue Fund.
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YorkshirePost.co.uk
|
| 10th
November : We're Sure He's Still Alive. |
|
The anguished wife of a South
Yorkshire jet ski ace missing off the coast of Bali for two weeks
says: "I know he is still alive."
|
|
Jacqui Hoyland has returned
to Penistone after an 11-day search for her husband Jeremy who
disappeared off the Indonesian island on Friday October 24.
|
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The mum-of-two said her
husband of 15 years was a "survivor" and she was confident
he would be found.
|
|
Jeremy, aged 41, was with
three friends returning to Tanjung Benoa beach from the islet of Nusa
Lembongan when one of the party fell back due to choppy water.
|
|
The ex-Penistone Grammar
School pupil waited for him to catch up - but although the friend made
it home Jeremy was not seen again.
|
|
He made two phone calls to a
pal in Sheffield, the first to say his jet ski was having problems,
and then that it was taking on water.
|
|
Jacqui, of Talbot Road, says
she had spent £10,000 on the search including hiring helicopters to
drop leaflets offering a US $10,000 reward on remote fishing villages.
|
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Jeremy's brother Nicholas and
a friend remain in Indonesia.
|
|
She added: "I'm not
sleeping properly, I can't do anything, I haven't eaten, I've just got
to find him.
|
|
"I have a duty to him
and to our children to bring him back. I have to stay strong for our
children, I won't rest until I find him, absolutely not, no way.
|
|
"My gut feeling is he
will be hanging on. He's a big, strong man, very sensible.
|
|
Jet skis don't sink and if
he's got to an island he will survive eating fruit and whatever's
available.
|
|
It's not unusual to find
people weeks after they go missing. They end up stuck on an
island."
|
|
Jeremy Hoyland is a leading
light in the world of jet ski racing. He was in Bali as guest of the
organisers of the Asian Games.
|
|
In his first call he reckoned
he was about a mile from land. In his second it was out of sight.
|
|
Jacqui has met Barnsley MP
Mick Clapham to urge the Government to provide expert help.
|
|
Sir Richard Branson has
spoken to the British ambassador in Indonesia on her behalf.
|
|
The couple have two children,
Georgia, 11, and Ellena, 13.
|
|
Jacqui said they had been
raising money for the search at their schools, St John's Juniors and
Penistone Grammar.
|
|
TheStar.co.uk
|
| 8th
November : Goa Gets Its 1st Woman
Lifeguard In Lass From UK. |
|
PANAJI: Goa is all set to get
its own CJ Parker or Stephanie Holden.
|
|
This season, sauntering on
the beaches, peering through binoculars and, if needed, rushing into
the choppy waters of the Arabian sea to rescue swimmers in distress
will be a blonde, blue-eyed, long-legged lass from the United Kingdom.
|
|
Kerry Blewett, 22 years and
5’10” in height, has arrived from the sea-side county of Cornwall
to give Goan lifeguards a lesson in rescuing, but could well turn out
to be a tourist attraction herself.
|
|
“I’ll just have to face
it,” laughs Kerry, the first woman lifeguard Goa will have.
|
|
On Thursday, Kerry
demonstrated jet-ski manoeuvring techniques to 25 male rookie
lifeguards at Baina beach, Vasco.
|
|
“I’m here to train women
lifeguards and spread water-safety awareness among beachgoers,” says
Kerry, who has five major rescues under her belt.
|
|
Kerry’s knowledge of the
sea reflects in her azure eyes.
|
|
“I’ve been a lifeguard
for the last four years and worked on different beaches during our
May-October summer. Swimming, rowing and surfing are my hobbies,”
says the waterbaby who spent the last three winters studying at the
University of Cardiff and recently graduated in sports science.
|
|
Having a woman lifeguard in
Goa could result in some interesting incidents.
|
|
“We’ve conducted rescues
of women tourists and in one case a woman refused CPR from a male
lifeguard at Calangute,” says Rajiv Somani, chairman and managing
director of Drishti Special Response, which has been awarded the beach
safety management programme in Goa.
|
|
That’s not a worry for
Kerry.
|
|
“In an emergency we don’t
really see if we’re rescuing a man or a woman. Here, I may
coordinate rescues and even get into the action, if needed,” she
says.
|
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Comparing Goan beaches to
those in the UK, Kerry says, “The beaches here are wider, and the
water’s warmer and calmer. Back home, we have a rocky coastline,
lots of coves, bigger waves and water that is cold.”
|
|
Drishti has 11 lifeguard
towers from Baga to Sinquerim in the north and from Velsao to Benaulim
in the south, equipped with communication, first aid and beach
transport facilities.
|
|
“If we even get one woman
lifeguard at each of the 11 towers, I think that would be
sufficient,” said Somani.
|
|
“Women lifeguards can match
up to men. Strength is not a major factor. It’s all about the right
technique.
|
|
Once they know it, women
lifeguards could be able to flip a 100 kg drowning man onto the rescue
tube,” said Somani.
|
|
Indiatimes.com
|
| 4th
November : Jeremy Hoyland Update- Search Continues To Outlying
Areas. |
|
This news is current as of
6:00 PM, Bali Indonesia time on November 4, 2008.
|
|
The IJSBA would like to
update the PWC community on the current search efforts of Jeremy
Hoyland.
|
|
As of this posting, there
still has been no sighting of Jeremy or the PWC he was riding when he
went missing on October 24th.
|
|
Recently, more than 5,000
leaflets have been helicopter dropped to fishing vessels in efforts to
further mobilize the local aquatic community to join in the search.
|
|
We believe that word of any
possible sightings from the fishing community will soon be reported.
|
|
But, as of this posting,
there have been no sightings or contacts since the 24th and all
reported sightings, recoveries or contacts have been confirmed as
either inaccurate or not being related to Jeremy Hoyland.
|
|
The Hoyland family has been
participating in continued helicopter searches in more remote areas of
Bali.
|
|
These far outlying areas have
been combed with the assistance of private enterprises which have made
it possible to reach places not possible due to the limited fuel
capacity of Bali based helicopters.
|
|
Some of the Hoyland family
has returned to England in order to tend to family matters and to
begin working with the United Kingdom government for assistance in the
next phase of searching.
|
|
The search efforts will next
focus on areas of Java which are possible areas where Jeremy may be
located if he was carried by a current different from was previously
believed.
|
|
We are maintaining hope that
Jeremy will be found, safely, in one of these remote areas or that he
has been picked up by a fishing vessel that has not yet returned to
the mainland.
|
|
Whatever the outcome, the
Hoyland family will need assistance recovering from the events of the
past eleven days. We urge those who can to give generously to the
Jeremy Hoyland support fund.
|
|
This fund can be found here: http://jeremyhoylandrescue.myblogsite.com/.
|
|
Christmas will soon be upon
us and those who celebrate it (or the season) will quickly be strapped
for cash.
|
|
We are asking those who are
able to support the fund to not hesitate as this crisis will soon be
at its peak but the effects will remain for a lifetime.
|
|
A blog to offer positive
wishes to the family can be found here: http://jeremyhoylandrescue.myblogsite.com/entry1.html.
|
|
ijsba.com
|
| 2nd
November : Briton Still Missing In Indonesia. |
|
An air and sea search for a
Briton who went missing in Indonesia more than a week ago is
continuing.
|
|
Jeremy Hoyland, 41, of
Penistone, South Yorkshire, travelled to the island as a race official
in the Asian Beach Games.
|
|
But the father-of-two has not
been seen since going out on a Jet ski ride to Nusa Lembongan islet on
27 October.
|
|
His wife, Jacqui, and brother
Nicholas are helping with the search. A family friend said they were
optimistic he would be found.
|
|
The friend Jonathan Oddy said
although there had been no sightings of Mr Hoyland or the red Yamaha
Jet ski he was riding, the Indonesian authorities had told the family
they are committed to the search.
|
|
Text Message
|
|
"Having looked at the
east coast, they are now focusing their search on the west coast of
the island.
|
|
"If they were not
confident they would not spend time on these resources."
|
|
Mr Hoyland and four of his
friends travelled to Nusa Lembongan on sea scooters.
|
|
He had planned to return to
Bali's Tanjung Benoa beach a few hours after the others to preside
over a Jet ski race.
|
|
He sent a text message from
his mobile phone about five hours after his friends returned to say he
was about two miles from the beach and needed help.
|
|
The family has been handing
out leaflets on the island appealing for help.
|
|
Mr Oddy said: "Jeremy is
the sort of guy who is hands-on and has the potential to be
self-sufficient. We're confident he will be found."
|
|
Reward
|
|
The missing man's daughters,
Ellena, 13 and Georgia, 11, have remained in the UK.
|
|
Another family friend, Scott
Frazier, executive director of the International Jet Sports Boating
Association, of which Mr Hoyland was an official, has offered a
$10,000 (£6,380) reward for his safe return.
|
|
Others, including Sir Richard
Branson, have also pledged money to a search fund.
|
|
The Foreign Office is in
contact with Indonesian authorities and is providing consular
assistance to Mr Hoyland's family.
|
|
BBCNews
|