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Body believed to be missing TV Dr. Michael Mosley found on Greek island

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Body believed to be missing TV Dr. Michael Mosley found on Greek island

Police said that a body believed to be that of missing British TV presenter Michael Mosley was found on a Greek island Sunday morning.

A police spokesman, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of an ongoing investigation, said the body was found on a rocky coast by a private boat and that formal identification was pending.

Mosley went missing on the island of Symi Wednesday afternoon after going for a walk.

Lefteris Papakalodoukas, the island’s mayor, told The Associated Press he was on the boat with members of the media representatives when they saw a body about 65 feet above the Agia Marina beach a little after 10 a.m. “We zoomed with the cameras and saw it was him,” he said.

Mosley is well-known in Britain for his regular appearances on television and radio and for his column in the Daily Mail newspaper. ZUMAPRESS.com

The mayor said that the body appeared to have fallen down a steep slope, stopping against a fence and lying face-up with a few rocks on top of it.

The body had a leather bag in one hand, said Antonis Mystiloglou, a cameraman with state TV ERT, who was also on the boat.

Mosley, 67, is well-known in Britain for his regular appearances on television and radio and his column in the Daily Mail newspaper.

Police said that a body believed to be that of missing British TV presenter Michael Mosley was found on a Greek island Sunday morning. REUTERS

He is known outside the UK for his 2013 book “The Fast Diet,” which he co-authored with journalist Mimi Spencer.

The book proposed the so-called “5:2 diet,” which promised to help people lose weight quickly by minimizing their calorie intake two days a week while eating healthily on the other five.

He subsequently introduced a rapid weight loss program and has made a number of films about diet and exercise.

Mosley went missing on the small eastern Aegean island of Symi on Wednesday afternoon after reportedly leaving a beach to go for a walk. Facebook

Mosley has often pushed his body to extreme lengths to see the effects of his diets and also lived with tapeworms in his guts for six weeks for the BBC documentary “Infested! Living With Parasites.”

Mosley has four children with his wife Clare Bailey Mosley, who is also a doctor, author and health columnist.

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