Body found on Greek island identified as missing British tourist | Greece

A corpse on a barren Greek island was described as the British tourist Michele Bourda, who disappeared from a beach longer than a month.
Greece’s coastal protection, the disappearance of the 59 -year -old corpse, which led to a major rescue operation, confirmed that a yacht in the islets of its fidosis was discovered.
Bourda’s husband, Christos, said to Greek news outlet Protothema, “identity has happened today before.” “I was completely ruined. I did my best to get to know my wife because it was just bone… This is a tragedy.”
Both of them were university students in Germany 36 years ago, the Greek -born pharmacist, who met with Briton, said he would make accusations against local authorities due to the way he handled the case.
“The investigation was not carried out properly. I filed a complaint against the police and the coast protection because they were slow while dealing with the disappearance of my wife. Valuable time was disappeared and still alive.”
He said that the police took three hours to write the report of a missing person.
His mother, who was born in Glasgow, was last lying on a popular sunbed near the northern city of Kavala before waking up to find his loss on August 1, on August 1st.
The images caught in CCTV showed that the crepes enjoyed in a beach cage hours ago. “Unfortunately, I fell asleep first and wasn’t there when I woke up,” he said 66 -year -old.
The ruins were finally found more than 25 miles (40 km) along the coast. The couple living in Scotland came to Greece on holiday three days ago.
According to Christos, Bourda had a story of depression. However, the day he disappeared, he said he was in good souls and left his personal belongings on the sun loungers, including medicine and towel.
A few hours later the warning was raised and the search started. However, the Pharmacist, who said that his wife had lost once in England, claims that he was looking for most of the first day on his own, after he was desperate when he loses his job at CT.
“The police didn’t do anything,” he said. “A person who was there said that he did not see the police, not a single police on the beach that day. The only thing I saw was a police car that was up and down on the road to the beach. Not leaving the car was just looking at the sea direction.”
A Greek lost people charged with charity, Lifeline Hellas, a silver warning stating that his life was “dangerous ve and that he mobilized the Greek authorities when it was understood that he could not be found.
At first, the search almost focused on the sea, Helen Coast Guard sent two patrol boats. Special recreation craft and five fishing boats also cleaned the waters and expanded all the Strymonian Gulf.
Three days later, when the operation failed, the Greek police took over and focused on their calls.
“After many days, nothing unusual that nothing can be found,” a Coast Guard official said. “The protocol determines that the police are taking responsibility for the search now.”
On August 10, rescue efforts concentrated when a expert team came from Athens with three Sniffer dogs from Athens. Evangelos Kollias, a spokesman for the police force in Komotini, said Evangelos Kollias, who supervised the investigation, said, “They have been here for 15 days.”
“The scenario he moved away was actively examined. We had police officers in the patrol cars looking for the missing woman and patrol cars. We promised to continue their search until they were found.”
Authorities now believe that Bourda is probably drowning and that her body has been pushed through strong currents along the coast before being discovered on the special island. The results of an autopsy made by pathologists on Friday have not yet been announced.




