
Man mysteriously goes missing while paragliding in huge gust of wind
Colombian authorities have launched a desperate search for a man who mysteriously vanished while paragliding amid a huge gust of wind.
Luis Sanabria, 58, was last seen over Villavicencio, about 80 miles south east from the capital city of Bogotá, when he lost control in strong wind currents.
His wife, Angie Moreno, told Semana newspaper that he was with a group of friends who managed to land safely after noticing that the conditions were not suitable for paragliding.
'It was the weather conditions, when he went out to fly, the weather was fine and suddenly a gust of wind took him away; his companions managed to get off,' Moreno said.
'We don't know what condition he's in, you can't imagine the anxiety one is living, it's been three nights without him.'
Sanabria, who has been paragliding for 15 years, was carrying a GPS during the flight, but they have not been able to trace his location, likely because it lost power.
Moreno believes the winds may have carried him towards Acacias, a town located 17 miles southwest of Villavicencio.
The area is difficult to reach and the weather conditions have make it even more troublesome for search and rescue crews to find Sanabria.
A unit of about 25 first responders from the fire department, civil defense and Red Cross have joined the search for Sanabria, a former police officer who works as a systems engineer for the Villavicencio Transportation Ministry.
First responders used a drone to search the forested area in the town of Manzanares and the San Cristobal peak in Acacias.
The Colombia Air Force deployed a Blackhawk helicopter to assist with the mission,
Air Force captain, Andrés Rodríguez, said they studied the wind charts and other weather conditions which suggested that Moreno may have drifted towards Acacias.
'We carried out a search using the aircraft's electro-optical sensors and the aircraft's rescuers, although due to the complex weather conditions in the area, it was not possible to find him,' he said said.
While the paragliding is considered a relatively safe extreme sport, many risks come with it, including injuries and fatalities.
In February, a female paraglider was blown off course while swirling winds that caused her to slam into a building in the southern Brazil municipality of Santos. A quick-thinking tenant pulled the woman into his apartment and out of harms away.
In January, 38-year-old Paulina Biskup, of Poland, died after she lost control of her parachute mid-flight and crashed Roldanillo, a town in southwestern Colombia.
Investigators would learn that Biskup 'did not fasten the harness, and as a result, fell into the abyss.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
43 minutes ago
- BBC News
Women praised for bravery by Dorset fire service boss
Two women who helped people escape separate fires have been given special commendations for their Chubb rescued a woman from her smoke-filled Sherborne home on 26 January, Dorset & Wiltshire Fire Service Dowdall meanwhile, showed "calm determination" to get a neighbour to safety after a fire in Weymouth on 15 July, were both given awards by the fire service's chief fire officer, Andy Cole, at an annual ceremony at Tidworth Garrison Theatre. Mr Cole said: "In both of these cases, members of the community have shown exceptional quick-thinking and courage, and I have no doubt that two lives were saved as a result." You can follow BBC Dorset on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Family of Scot missing in Portugal fly out to join search as they plead for sightings
The family of a Scot missing in Portugal have spoken of their heartbreak as they plead for locals to help in the search for him. Greg Monks' worried parents, Lynne McGloin and Gordon Monks, as well as girlfriend Nicole Ashleigh Kelso, have travelled to Albufeira to join the hunt for the 38-year-old amid growing fears for his safety. The plant mechanic from Glasgow was last seen in the early hours of Wednesday morning during the first night out of a five-day stag do he was on with friends. Mr Monks, who is due to be a groomsman at the wedding of his friend, told pals he was heading back to his holiday apartment but has not been seen since. Greg's sister, Jillian Monks, said: 'We are really struggling. We are living in a nightmare, it's sickening.' Ms Monks said police have told her that her brother was last spotted on CCTV in the quieter residential area of Cerro de Águia – which is around four miles from the Novochoro Apartments he had checked into. The hill with residential properties is also more than an hour's walk west of the Albufeira Strip, where Mr Monks is thought to have left his friends. Ms Monks, who has had to remain in Glasgow with her two young children, said travelling out to Portugal had helped her parents feel that they are doing what they can to try to find him. She has also set up a social media page dedicated to raising awareness of the search. In one message posted she thanked British holidaymakers, expats and locals for their support, writing: 'As previously stated this is so unlike Greg and we are truly desperate for answers. 'I am now seeking help from residents of the Cerro de Águia area to please check any home cameras or doorbell footage between around 2am and 5am on Wednesday as police believe he was in the area around this time. 'Please share this if you know anyone in the area. Thank you for all the support.' She later added: 'Please, we are desperate.' The family fear Mr Monks became lost in the unfamiliar surroundings and may have had an accident. Hospitals have been checked without success but police are not thought to have yet carried out an exhaustive search of medical centres. This would involve officers going round wards to check on patients admitted without proper identification. Ms Monks has described her brother as a 'really hard worker' and a 'quiet guy', whose disappearance immediately 'threw up a red flag'. She said he has a Thor-type Viking unfinished tattoo at the top of his right arm which would be visible if he was wearing a vest top or had no shirt on. Ms Kelso is said to have checked through Mr Monks' case to see what was missing. As such, the family believe he was wearing a navy blue Nike shorts and top set when he disappeared. A GoFundMe appeal set up on behalf of the family to help support the search had reached more than £14,700 yesterday afternoon. Mr Monks' other sister, Carlyn, also pleaded with people online yesterday as she shared the family's appeal for help. She wrote: 'Please keep sharing and help get my brother home.'


Telegraph
4 hours ago
- Telegraph
Body of missing British hiker found in Dolomites
The body of a British hiker who went missing in the Dolomites on New Year's Day has been found by Italy's alpine rescue service. Aziz Ziriat, 36, was last heard from five months ago while hiking through the mountain range in the Trentino region of north Italy with his friend Sam Harris. Several Items and pieces of equipment belonging to 35-year-old Mr Harris were discovered by search and rescue teams in the days after the pair's disappearance. Rescuers retrieved Mr Harris's body on Jan 8 from deep snow at the foot of a cliff on the south face of Mount Carè Alto after tracing his whereabouts through his mobile phone. Mr Ziriat's body was found by a sniffer dog on Saturday in a rocky crevice covered by snow approximately one kilometre away from and 400 metres below where that of his long-term friend had been discovered. The rescue service said that an unsuccessful first search at an altitude of 2,600 metres had taken place that day in the same area where Mr Harris was found. The team had swept an entire gully for any sign of his companion. A second search was then undertaken, with the team carefully lowering themselves along the wall below the base of the slope of the site of the first search. Mr Ziriat's remains were transported to the Spiazzo Rendena sports field and collected by representatives of the coroner's office. His family was immediately informed of the discovery. He was a charity worker with Palace for Life, the official Crystal Palace FC charity, and had undertaken many hiking trips with Mr Harris, according to Rebecca Dimmock, Mr Ziriat's girlfriend, The pair had last been seen in the San Valentino Valley, near a mountain hut named Casina Dosson. In a video, filmed on the day of their disappearance and shared with The Telegraph, they had discussed plans to scale 3,000-metre high mountains. Heavy snowfall, fog, and sub-zero temperatures had repeatedly hampered rescuers' efforts to find Mr Ziriat, and they were often forced to curtail searches for their own safety. Since the body of Mr Harris was found, his family has raised more than £11,000 for Doctors without Borders, the alpine rescue service and St Mungo's Homeless Charity in his memory. One anonymous donor stated just over a week ago: 'To one of the most awesome human beings I had the privilege of knowing. RIP Sam, you were one of life's good ones.'