mr mosley was was last seen early on wednesday afternoon, when he went for a walk alone in a remote mountainous area. local officials say the body was spotted on a steep slope above a beach. yesterday new cctv footage emerged showing him heading towards a path that would have taken him over miles of exposed hillside. in the past hour we've had a statement from michael mosley�*s wife clare. it reads... i don't know quite where to begin with this. it's devastating to have lost michael, my wonderful, funny (ani) kind and brilliant husband. we had an incredibly lucky life together. we loved each other very (ani) much and were so happy together. i am incredibly proud of our children, their resilience and support over the past days. my family and i have been hugely comforted by the outpouring of love from people around the world. it's clear that michael meant a huge amount to so many of you. we're taking comfort in the fact that he so very nearly made it. the statement goes on to say... he did an incredible climb, took the wrong route and collapsed where he couldn't easily be seen by the extensive search team. michael was an adventurous man, it's part of what made him so special. we are so grateful to the extraordinary people on symi who have worked tirelessly to help find him. some of these people on the island, who hadn't even heard of michael, worked from dawn till dusk unasked. we're also very grateful to the press who have dealt with us with great respect. finally, clare says... i feel so lucky to have our children and my amazing friends. most of all, i feel so lucky to have had this life with michael. thank you all. our correspondentjoe inwood our correspondent joe inwood has our correspondentjoe inwood has the latest from the island of symi. i've been here for three orfour days now following the attempt to find michael mosley and you hear that statement from clare bailey mosley and it is very sad, it is a very heartfelt statement for a man who so many people clearly loved and held in great affection. he was a very well—known broadcaster, a doctor, a medical expert but he was also a husband and father. a friend to many people and that is what came through in a bear. —— that what came through in there. as you say, it was the news that we had been expecting from this morning and certainly, the longer it went on, the longer the search went on, the more it was that he would be found alive and well. it is incredibly hot here, incredibly difficult conditions, those hills behind me, those aren't the hills he was found on but but they are very similar geologically. they are the same sort of height, it is very rough terrain, very difficult, very exposed. it was right in the middle of the day and it would have been incredibly arduous climb. clare bailey mosley�*s statement makes it very clear that he had tried a very difficult climb as she points out he had very nearly succeeded. we were just around the bay, he was found at a place called agia marina and we were there just 30 minutes or so ago on a boat and you could see it and you could see the point at which he had been found and he was so nearly made it down towards the beach. this is the point that she was making, for the family, they got some comfort that he got so close. obviously, in the end, he did not make it and the discovery today of his body is very, very sad news. of course, for the people here who try to find him but most of all for the mosley family. michael mosley is well known for bbc programmes including their pod cast just one thing in the series trust me i'm a doctor. david sillitoe has been looking at his career. now, the diet i'm about to go on was developed by a nutritionist in toronto and... michael mosley, a trusted, charismatic guru of good health. one way to tell if you're sleep deprived is to go to bed in the middle of the afternoon and... a tv producer and presenter always happy to be the guinea pig in the search for a better understanding of the science of sleep, fitness... and it's also good for my heart and lungs. ..and weight, most notably in 2012, when he was diagnosed with type ii diabetes. i've got this list of the things that i am allowed on my new diet and the things that i am definitely not allowed. his subsequent weight loss using intermittent fasting inspired thousands to follow the 5—2 diet. this scanner will give the best images of my heart that money can buy. his enthusiasm for experimenting on himself had been inspired by a scientist who had proved that ulcers were caused by bacteria by deliberately infecting himself. michael mosley realised it would make great television, and helped take science out of the lab and into people's lives. nothing seemed to daunt him. here he is infesting himself with tapeworms. there they go. but there was always a serious point. if type ii diabetes could be reversed or chronic insomnia helped, he wanted to test it himself. didn't really think this one through! there are many who say he changed their lives. david sillito, bbc news. broadcaster doctor phil hammond met michael mosley early harnessed to film career. hejoined me to pay tribute. it film career. he “oined me to pay tribute. , , , ~ ., tribute. it is very shocking, and very sad. _ tribute. it is very shocking, and very sad, particularly _ tribute. it is very shocking, and very sad, particularly hearing . very sad, particularly hearing claire's praise of mike, his legacy lives on. his infectiousness and love of science and his unique skill to explain it. i met him in 1995 and i had just broken the story of the bristol heart scandal in private eye and outed myself and mike came up with this idea of a show called trust me i'm a doctor. he initially wanted to present it and to talk about lifestyle measures you could take. he wanted to challenge the medical establishment, he wanted to talk about huge inequalities in health care. bristol was about child heart surgery but we knew were all the bodies were hidden because we are both doctors and i was still working be exposed inequalities in all sorts of areas such as, cancer care, heart disease care. it had quite a profound influence in bringing things up like the national institute of care and excellence and the quality control measures that followed. that is sort of forgotten now, he moved but only on to talk about lifestyle stuff but early on in his career he was quite political and quite mysterious. every episode what dean had what you would have you expletive exposing areas of the nhs doing not so well in other areas doing so well and why can't everywhere be at the same standard. i remember... his encyclopedic knowledge, he was a very good editor to work with because he was across all their stories in minute detail and he was really enthusiastic. i was not surprised when he came to the bank became present himself because he had the gift of communication as a david sillitoe said, the number of people that would queue up at his event not to get signed covers of his books but to say thank you, i followed your advice and it made a huge difference to me. i think a fitting legacy would be to free if we want the nhs to survive in future, everyone is putting their money on prevention instead of pulling people out of the river of illness, we need to wander upstream and stop them getting in the first place and that was my�*s thing. though he shied away from party politics, we sort of need to politicise his advice. we need to absolutely throw everything into prevention so the really good advice that he had, we need to make it available to everybody. we can improve the obesity rates and general health rates. i think that legacy will live on, people will remember him and people smile. anyone who met mike will always smile because he was always such a loving, kind, generous person he had slightly infectious and impish laugher. i am very sad that i am also really proud to have had him in my life. an absolute joy to work with him. he my life. an absolute 'oy to work with him. , u, my life. an absolute 'oy to work with him. , , my life. an absolute 'oy to work with him. , with him. he 'ust came across as somebody. — with him. he just came across as somebody. and _ with him. he just came across as somebody, and i— with him. he just came across as somebody, and i think _ with him. he just came across as somebody, and i think your - with him. he just came across as - somebody, and i think your comments there justify somebody, and i think your comments therejustify this, he reallyjust cared about people and wanted them to be as healthy as they could possibly be. to be as healthy as they could possibly be-— to be as healthy as they could ossibl be. , ., , ., , possibly be. yes. people who give up medicine always _ possibly be. yes. people who give up medicine always slightly _ possibly be. yes. people who give up medicine always slightly guilty - possibly be. yes. people who give up medicine always slightly guilty of - medicine always slightly guilty of it. he did ppe first and then he tried his hand at banking and then he moved on to medicine. he wanted to be a psychiatrist but he found front line psychiatry at that time to be disillusioning so he wasn't sure whether to take a house job or apply to the bbc. he got into the bbc training programme. i think he felt that slight guilt about having spent all this time investing in his medical training he ought to do something with it. although we are a bit sniffy about tv doctors, the best ones reach far more. an average gp will see maybe a0 or 50 people a day, a really good broadcaster will reach millions. if you get your message right and you do it in a way that empowers and encourages people to make small changes. it isjust that empowers and encourages people to make small changes. it is just a brilliant title, just one thing, just one thing at a time. small incremental changes in your life can improve your health so i think that even though he wasn't a practising nhs doctor, he proudly helps more patience than most of us with a lifetime of dedication to the nhs. he was very modest about it and, as are people have said, he did not seek fame orfortune, and he are people have said, he did not seek fame or fortune, and he was very successful at what he did but it was just... it was almost like an enthusiastic schoolkid, he would go down a rabbit hole and he would ferret out a bit of research and he'll be very excited about it. he just loved the process of science and he loved explaining it, he will be missed. as i say, his legacy will live on. ., ., ., live on. doctor phil hammond there. the bbc live — live on. doctor phil hammond there. the bbc live page — live on. doctor phil hammond there. the bbc live page have _ live on. doctor phil hammond there. the bbc live page have many - live on. doctor phil hammond there. the bbc live page have many more l the bbc live page have many more tributes to michael mosley, they have been coming in all afternoon, you can go on a website to read them and the latest updates are available to you there. the hamas—run health ministry in gaza says 27a palestinians were killed during saturday's israeli offensive on the nuseirat refugee camp. the operation led to the rescue of four israeli hostages taken by hamas during the october 7th attacks — were freed during the raid, in broad daylight. the operation led to the rescue of four israeli hostages taken by hamas during the october 7th attacks — were freed during the raid, in broad daylight. footage from around the hospital has shown people lying on the ground. let's speak to our correspondent jon donnison who's injerusalem. 0ur correspondentjon donnison has more on the reaction in israel from jerusalem. is there any concern at that this will be a new strategy try and free those hostages? that will be a new strategy try and free those hostages?— those hostages? that will be a concern in _ those hostages? that will be a concern in gaza _ those hostages? that will be a concern in gaza given - those hostages? that will be a concern in gaza given the - those hostages? that will be a i concern in gaza given the number those hostages? that will be a - concern in gaza given the number of casualties we have seen, the mood here in israel has been one of relief, and in some part celebrations and the release of those four hostages. but we have heard of some of the families of the hostages that remain in gaza and there are 116 people who were captured on october seven who are still being held and we think around a0 of those are dead. the families of those people are concerned, i think, that this will embolden prime minister netanyahu to think that he is a strategy is working. he thinks that the best way to get the hostages out is to apply military pressure on hamas and yesterday's operation will encourage that view from him. the numbers, though, in gaza have caused outrage. 27a people killed according to the hamas run health industry, as you say, and 700 injured. we have seen the two central hospitals in gaza completely overwhelmed with the number of patients having to treat. this was a hell system that was already pretty much broken. we hell system that was already pretty much broken-— hell system that was already pretty much broken. ~ ., .,, _, , much broken. we heard those comments from the eu top — much broken. we heard those comments from the eu top diplomat _ much broken. we heard those comments from the eu top diplomat condemning i from the eu top diplomat condemning the killings and describing them as another massacre of civilians, do you think that could have any impact on benjamin netanyahu's policy going forward? i on benjamin netanyahu's policy going forward? ., �* ~' on benjamin netanyahu's policy going forward? ., �* ~ ., , forward? i don't think so to be honest. forward? i don't think so to be honest- i _ forward? i don't think so to be honest. i think— forward? i don't think so to be honest. i think mr _ forward? i don't think so to be honest. i think mr borel- forward? i don't think so to be honest. i think mr borel said l forward? i don't think so to be j honest. i think mr borel said it would be a bloodbath that needed to end immediately. immediately there was response and israeli minister who said shame on you, shame on you for criticising israel for simply trying to free its citizens whilst not criticising hamas for holding hostages in the densely populated civilian areas. all the while, of course, we have is american led push for a deal, notjust a deal to free the hostages but a ceasefire deal and that does not seem to be going anywhere at the moment was not we have the us secretary of state antony blinken set to arrive in the region again this week and he will be pushing for that deal, trying to put pressure on mr netanyahu but as i say, those talks which are being mediated by the qataris and the egyptians, they do not seem to be going anywhere at the moment. john. going anywhere at the moment. john, thank ou going anywhere at the moment. john, thank you very — going anywhere at the moment. john, thank you very much. _ going anywhere at the moment. john, thank you very much. john _ going anywhere at the moment. john, thank you very much. john donnison injerusalem. it is time to take a look at today's sport and with all the details here is ben croucher. we will start with tennis with carlos alcaraz who is taking on zverev in the men's singles final hunting for his first major singles title whilst alcaraz has two and record already. spanish man took control with a booming forehand winner to take the first set into the second and both players have held their service games currently and it is currently 1-1 games currently and it is currently 1—1 in that. one final already done and dusted at coco gauff and her partner crowned women doubles champions. they won in straight sets and it is coco gauff�*s first title whilst her partner celebrates her eighth and her third whilst her partner celebrates her eighth and herthird in whilst her partner celebrates her eighth and her third in paris. two cricket now and new york. this is providing a unique setting for one of the sport's fiercest rivalries with pakistan versus india. 0ver with pakistan versus india. over 30,000 fans turned up at eisenhower park to watch but the rain delayed the start and not that that seems to be upsetting those that are queueing up be upsetting those that are queueing up to get in. when they did get under way pakistan will be after a bit improved performance after a surprising loss. it is bit improved performance after a surprising loss.— surprising loss. it is a big game, india pakistan, _ surprising loss. it is a big game, india pakistan, as— surprising loss. it is a big game, india pakistan, as we _ surprising loss. it is a big game, india pakistan, as we know, - surprising loss. it is a big game, | india pakistan, as we know, there surprising loss. it is a big game, - india pakistan, as we know, there is no need to motivate the team any more they are well motivated and focused for this game. we have had to forget about the last couple of days and move forward. that is the only way you can deal with life. results are results, they take care of themselves. but the way we arrive at a match and pitch up and give it our best shot, make sure our skills are up to where they need to be, it's all under control.— it's all under control. being a ca tain, it's all under control. being a captain. i— it's all under control. being a captain, i have _ it's all under control. being a captain, i have to _ it's all under control. being a captain, i have to make - it's all under control. being a - captain, i have to make decisions on the field _ captain, i have to make decisions on the field i_ captain, i have to make decisions on the field. ithink captain, i have to make decisions on the field. i think what is more important _ the field. i think what is more important for me is to just think about_ important for me is to just think about what i need to do right now on this particular over, not to think of how— this particular over, not to think of how much do we need to get after 20 overs _ of how much do we need to get after 20 overs or— of how much do we need to get after 20 overs or how much we need to bowl them _ 20 overs or how much we need to bowl them out, _ 20 overs or how much we need to bowl them out, i_ 20 overs or how much we need to bowl them out, i think it's about that one over— them out, i think it's about that one over and how we want to finish that over. — one over and how we want to finish that over, staying in the present and literally, leaving it down to overby— and literally, leaving it down to overby over. a and literally, leaving it down to overby over-— and literally, leaving it down to overby over. a drizzly morning in new york. _ overby over. a drizzly morning in new york. 400 _ overby over. a drizzly morning in new york, 400 miles _ overby over. a drizzly morning in new york, 400 miles north - overby over. a drizzly morning in new york, 400 miles north in . new york, a00 miles north in montreal, we should be in a in for an exciting canadian grand prix later and rein in the forecast later on and an unusual pole sitter to with an extraordinary qualifier said exactly the same time as their leader maximus mr penn but the british man will be ahead because he started first. it's the first time his team will be starting seven. it feels amazing, i mean, it's so much hi hard _ feels amazing, i mean, it's so much hi hard work— feels amazing, i mean, it's so much hi hard work back at the factory, atter— hi hard work back at the factory, after all— hi hard work back at the factory, after all these years i've sort of been _ after all these years i've sort of been zigzagging around, changing the personal— been zigzagging arou