Michael Mosley’s wife says ‘we will not lose hope’ as new footage emerges | Michael Mosley

The wife of the British TV doctor Michael Mosley, who went missing on the Greek island of Symi, has said her family “will not lose hope” as the search for her husband continues on its fourth day.

Dr Clare Bailey said: “It has been three days since Michael left the beach to go for a walk. The longest and most unbearable days for myself and my children.

“The search is ongoing and our family are so incredibly grateful to the people of Symi, the Greek authorities and the British Consulate who are working tirelessly to help find Michael. We will not lose hope.”

Clare Bailey appears with her husband on ITV’s This Morning. Photograph: Ken McKay/ITV/Shutterstock

Her statement came as new CCTV footage was shared of the doctor. The footage, published by the BBC, appears to show the 67-year-old walking under an umbrella in the village of Pedi on Wednesday, heading towards a path that traverses through rocky hills. The search team believe he may have left Pedi and embarked on a difficult route toward the island’s port town.

The video is believed to be one of the last two CCTV sightings before he left Pedi, where he had walked after leaving his wife at a beach at about 1.30pm local time on Wednesday.

Symi’s mayor, Eleftherios Papakaloudoukas, has said that there is “no chance” that the search for the Mosley will be called off until he is found, after the search was described as “a race against time”.

Mosley has been missing since Wednesday afternoon when he decided to walk from the beach he was at with his wife, leaving his phone behind. The search and rescue operation involves firefighters, divers, helicopters and drones.

A search team in Symi. Photograph: Yui Mok/PA

There has been no sign yet of Mosley, said Manolis Tsimpoukas, a search organiser, as firefighters resumed their search covering a four-mile (6.5km) radius on the island’s mountainous terrain.

Papakaloudoukas, questioned how anyone could survive in the scorching heat gripping the island, with the mercury topping 40C on the day Mosley disappeared. Symi and nearby islands are under a yellow weather warning for high temperatures and the mayor said the search dog was only able to work for an hour on Saturday morning due to the heat.

Papakaloudoukas said the area where Mosley is believed to have walked through was “difficult to pass” and was “only rocks”, and there were “loads” of snakes.

Mosley’s four children arrived on Symi on Saturday to assist with the search, the mayor said, joining Mosley’s wife, Dr Claire Bailey, and her friends. Mosley and Bailey arrived on the island on Tuesday.

skip past newsletter promotion

Map

On Friday, CCTV images of Mosley were released showing him shielding himself from the sun with an umbrella outside a restaurant in the village of Pedi, providing the first piece of concrete evidence that he made it to the village. The images were taken about 20 minutes after he left St Nikolas beach at about 1.30pm local time.

A senior police officer coordinating the operation said of the CCTV showing that he had reached Pedi: “In some ways the mystery has only deepened. Now we have to ask where did he go from there, and if he took another unexpected route [to the port town] did he slip and fall? We’re still no nearer to solving this.”

While Bailey has been searching for her husband in a wooded area above the village of Pedi, search teams now believe Mosley travelled through a much sparser area on the other side of the bay, Papakaloudoukas said, citing other CCTV evidence. Police have instructed taxi boats to raise the alert if they see anything strange after the search was expanded to the sea.

Dr Michael Mosley. Photograph: SYSPEO/Sipa/Rex/Shutterstock

One of the rescuers told the PA news agency that it would have taken a fit young person three hours to walk to the port from Pedi – the path on which Mosley is believed to have embarked after he reached the village. “The path is not easy to follow, if he took a wrong turn he would be lost. He could be anywhere, it is a race against time,” the rescuer said of the little-used path, which runs over inland terrain rather than along the coast.

The mayor’s daughter, Mika Papakalodouka, said some of the island’s 300 permanent residents were out searching for Mosley. “It’s such a small island to get lost on. It’s so weird for us. Everybody is worried and looking for him.”

Leave a reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here