
Greg Monks' sister urges friends to 'stick together' in party resorts after body found in Portugal
"Before everyone left the hotel that night Greg made sure they all had a business card and a map from the hotel to help them find their way home. That is the kind of person he was."
The sister of a Scots tourist who was found dead in Portugal after vanishing during a stag do has urged groups to "stick together" in party resorts.
Greg Monks disappeared hours into the first night of a five-day stag trip to Albufeira. The 38-year-old became separated from pals when trying to head back to his hotel after a night on the famous club strip in the Algarve city.
Greg, from Cambuslang near Glasgow, was last spotted on CCTV in a quiet residential area of Cerro de Aguia in the early hours of Wednesday, May 28 after arriving on the Tuesday evening.
Tragically, after a week long search, Greg's body was found at the bottom of a ravine in the Cerro de Aguia neighbourhood on Wednesday, June 4.
Now almost a week on from the devastating discovery, Greg's sister Jillian hopes her brothers story can serve as a warning to other Scots heading to party destinations, like Albufeira.
Jillian told the Record: "I think it just shows in places like Albufeira everyone needs to stick together and look after each other.
"His pals are absolutely devastated at what happened."
Jillian revealed how her kind-hearted brother Greg made efforts to make sure his pals remembered where the hotel was and how to find it, before he tragically disappeared.
She added: "Before everyone left the hotel that night Greg made sure they all had a business card and a map from the hotel to help them find their way home.
"That is the kind of person he was. He was just looking after everyone else. He was so considerate."
Police were able to locate Greg's body after CCTV from a local resident showed him attempting to scale a fence before he sadly fell to his death.
He was found with all his belongings on him, including his wallet and phone something that makes his family certain that Greg came to no harm.
Jillian said: "We don't believe that anything untoward happened. Everything the police have told us adds up.
"We'll never truly know the full story. But we believe he just got lost and ended up at the wrong place at the wrong time.
"It brings us some comfort knowing that Greg all had his belongings on him. He wasn't robbed, he still had his phone and his wallet, he had all his cards and cash."
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The Record yesterday told how Greg's loved ones are hoping to bring him home 'this week' as they plan his repatriation back to the UK. They are then planning a huge send off for him.
Greg's mum Lynne, cousin and girlfriend Nicole flew back from Portugal last night without him, with authorities in Portugal working to arrange Greg's return home.
Jillian said: 'We're hoping to bring Greg home by the weekend.
'His mum, girlfriend and cousin are going to fly home tonight. They wanted to fly back with him but it has just not been possible.
'It has been the toughest time of our lives. We still can't believe what has happened.
'But we're glad we now have some sense of closure. I don't know if any of us could have coped with even another day searching for my brother.
'We couldn't eat, we couldn't sleep. It was absolute torture.
'To know Greg has been found is a slight relief. We can now bring him home and give him the send off he deserves.'

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