Dr Mosley’s brother said he had been in ‘good spirits’ before the trip to Symi

 

MISSING Michael Mosley’s four children have flown to the Greek island where he was on holiday to join the search for their dad.

Alexander, Jack, Daniel and Katherine, who are all adults, were yesterday scouring the route on Symi where he was known to have walked after leaving his wife on the beach.

A sighting of Dr Michael Mosley walking in the sunshine on CCTV

A sighting of Dr Michael Mosley walking in the sunshine on CCTVCredit: Reuters

The TV doctor's kids were scouring the path he was known to have walked down after leaving his wife on the beach

The TV doctor’s kids were scouring the path he was known to have walked down after leaving his wife on the beachCredit: Alamy

The search goes on for missing TV doctor Michael Mosley on the Greek island of Symi

The search goes on for missing TV doctor Michael Mosley on the Greek island of SymiCredit: Mirrorpix

New CCTV footage shows the missing health guru less than half an hour after he left his wife at a beach on the island

New CCTV footage shows the missing health guru less than half an hour after he left his wife at a beach on the island
It comes as new CCTV pictures emerged which show Dr Mosley, 67, in the town of Pedi, shielding himself from the sun with an umbrella.

Pedi is at the end of a cliff path where it was initially feared Dr Mosley may have fallen.

Further images not shared with the media are said to show him later walking up a treacherous mountainous path from the town at about 2pm.

The path is a three-hour route back to Symi Town, where he was staying with his wife Dr Clare Bailey, 62, and another couple who they are friends with.

Dr Mosley had left his wife and the couple at Saint Nikolas beach, where they had arrived by boat.

He said he was feeling ill and would walk back.

Dr Mosley’s brother, Arthur, yesterday said: “We are very shocked and perplexed by what has happened. His children have now all gone to Greece and are walking the path trying to find him.

“We know as much as what the police and the media has reported, and hope there’s a good outcome.

“Unfortunately, when you get to Michael’s age, accidents like this can happen.”

He said his brother had been in “good spirits” before he went on holiday.

Last night, Greek police called off their water search and said they will now focus on the terrain between Pedi and Gialos, which is part of Symi Town where the couple were staying.

The island’s mayor, Papakalodoukas Lefterios, said search and rescue teams were looking at a one-and-a-half mile stretch of land.

He said: “They have not yet found anything. It is a mystery, this disappearance.

“The police of Symi, the Coast Guard and forces from Athens, including police and criminal investigators, are working non-stop till they find any clue. I very much doubt there is a criminal aspect in this case, at least as far the local community is concerned. I very much doubt any of the inhabitants of the island acted in that way.”

He added: “I do believe however, the elderly man walking on his own without a phone in an unknown island and 35C of heat could lead to many conclusions.

“He could have had unknown health issues triggered by the heat and he could’ve wandered through unknown paths and had an accident. Had he followed the right path, I believe that everything would have been OK.”

Greek authorities initially focused their search on the sea, with a team of divers called in.

Officials had said it is possible Dr Mosley had fainted in the heat and fallen “from a height”.

Investigators say he had told his wife Clare and a couple they were with at the beach that he felt unwell and would walk back

Investigators say he had told his wife Clare and a couple they were with at the beach that he felt unwell and would walk backCredit: Rex


Theories he was bitten by a snake or had become disoriented were also being examined.

But CCTV images show him walking past a cafe in Pedi having left the coastal path — 22 minutes after leaving his wife at the beach.

Last night, a Greek police source said the CCTV image was “one of many” investigators have of the doctor in the village.

Others are understood to show him heading towards an inland path that links Pedi to Symi Town, which would have meant the TV star would have walked along a rugged mountainous route.

‘Feeling unwell’

The source said: “The inland area has been scoured by helicopter but has not been searched thoroughly. He could be found inland.”

Search and rescue teams were yesterday re-tracing Dr Mosley’s steps, as a sniffer dog arrived on the island — which is 25 miles north of Rhodes — on a ferry from Greek capital, Athens.

Other sources said the TV doctor — who has diabetes and has spoken of his struggles with insomnia — could have carried on walking along another coastal path.

A woman has reported seeing him near a bus stop in the Pedi area on Wednesday.

There were also reports he was spotted talking to someone.

Yesterday, Greek journalist Ioanna Niaoti said: “It is understood that at about 1.30 local time he said he was not feeling very well and wanted to return home. He went to a coastal path leading to the village of Pedi. And this was the last time someone saw him, in Pedi.

“He stated this to the company he was with on the beach — to his wife and the couple they were staying with — that he was not feeling well and wanted to return home.

“So he left on his own and he didn’t have his mobile, which was left at their place. When his wife then realised he was not at home, she reported this to the police.”

Greek authorities have also said there was no sign Dr Mosley had tried to leave the island, which has a population of just 2,500.

Police and firefighters have been using drones and helicopters to try to locate him, with locals joining the search on land and at sea.

All speed and success to those searching for this dear man

Professor Roy Taylor
A team of investigators have travelled to Symi from Rhodes and have been taking statements.

The Greek meteorological service issued an excessive heat warning on Wednesday, the day Dr Mosley went missing in 38C (100F) heat.

Yesterday, temperatures had risen further and were nudging 40C.

The climb to the path he used involves walking up 100 steps to a height of 160ft.

The walk back to where they were staying should have taken less than an hour.

Dr Mosley’s wife raised the alarm at 7.30pm on Wednesday.

Officials launched an appeal for information at 11am on Thursday as help was drafted in from bigger islands and the mainland.

The search — centred on the island’s northern coastline — was paused as darkness fell on Thursday before resuming yesterday.

Dr Mosley has a newspaper column and has made films about diet and exercise.

He fronted the Channel 4 show Michael Mosley: Who Made Britain Fat? and took part in BBC series Trust Me, I’m A Doctor.

I literally feel sick with worry

Saleyha Ahsan
He also lived with tapeworms in his gut for six weeks for the documentary Infested! Living With Parasites, on BBC Four.

His famous 5:2 Diet — which limits calories on two days of the week — and The Fast 800 diet, have highlighted the virtues of fasting.

Dr Mosley previously told how he suffered an episode of transient global amnesia, which saw him lose his memory after a cold water swim.

In a 2019 newspaper column, he revealed how he ended up in A&E after the dip off the coast of Cornwall with his wife.

He told how it “all went blank” as he swam back to shore.

The next thing he remembered is waking up in hospital in Truro.

Medics told him he had almost certainly had a transient global amnesia episode, but its effects are benign and people do not usually suffer more than once.

Dr Mosley’s brother Arthur said: 'We are very shocked and perplexed by what has happened to him'
Dr Mosley’s brother Arthur said: ‘We are very shocked and perplexed by what has happened to him’Credit: Rex