CCTV shows missing British sailor buying kebab with dog on Gran Canaria, family update
Police release image as searches enter fifth week after his boat was found adrift and his dog recovered aboard

Spanish police have released CCTV images showing British sailor James Nunan ordering a takeaway with his dog on Gran Canaria as searches for the 34-year-old entered their fifth week.
The photograph, disclosed by authorities on Wednesday, shows Nunan seated at the counter of a kebab shop wearing a blue T-shirt with his miniature Jack Russell, Thumbelina, on his lap. Spanish coastguards found Nunan's boat, the Kehaar, adrift about 100 miles from his last known location on Aug. 25 with no sign of the sailor; Thumbelina was discovered alive on board and the vessel's anchor was raised and its engine switched off. Nunan's family reported him missing after they lost contact with him.
Nunan, from Reading, had last spoken with his mother on Aug. 18, and bank records show his card was used at 10:39 p.m. that evening at the takeaway. His half-sister, Nikita Goddard, told the BBC the family was also informed of a separate sighting on Aug. 19 when Nunan visited a police station at about 6:15 a.m. to report a missing passport. Documents confirming that visit were later found on his boat, she said.
Goddard said the police-station visit indicated Nunan was thinking clearly and urged against assumptions that he had been intoxicated and simply fallen overboard. She described the past weeks as "emotionally and physically exhausting and draining for the family," and said relatives were clinging to hope. Nunan's father and his half-sister have travelled to Gran Canaria to assist in the search and to work with local authorities.
Family members say Nunan set off in March on a solo attempt to sail around the world with Thumbelina aboard a boat he had bought in Slovenia. Hours before he was reported missing, he posted a Facebook Live video while walking among a group of people at Playa del Confital, according to family accounts. Essex Police said Nunan was reported missing to them on Aug. 22 by his mother after several days without contact, and his boat was located three days later.
A Foreign Office spokesman said the UK government was supporting Nunan's family and was in contact with local authorities. Essex Police said it was providing support to the family and had submitted queries through international liaison officers and Interpol to Spanish authorities, and that it was awaiting responses. "We dearly hope James can be located safely as soon as possible and we will continue to be in contact, alongside the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, with his family, and [will] help where we can," the force said.
The family met with the Spanish Civil Guard on Wednesday morning to receive an update on the investigation, Spanish broadcaster Antena 3 reported. Spanish police and rescue services continue to investigate the circumstances of Nunan's disappearance and the condition and movement of his boat prior to and after it was found.
Authorities have released limited operational detail while the inquiry continues. Investigators are examining CCTV, bank and travel records recovered from the vessel and local stations, and are coordinating with UK officials to establish a precise timeline of Nunan's movements in the days before he vanished. The Civil Guard has not publicly commented beyond confirming the images were released as part of the ongoing probe.
Search efforts and the formal investigation are continuing, and Nunan's family said they were not ready to give up.