Police have said ‘evidence strongly suggests’ the remains are those of the teenager
Rescue workers searching for missing British teenager Jay Slater in Tenerife have found human remains, police say.
Reuters reports that the remains were found in the area where the teenager went missing.
Efforts are underway to identify the body, but Spanish police have told Sky News that “evidence strongly suggests” the remains are those of the 19-year-old.
In a post on social media, Canarias Radio said the Civil Guard had found a body in the village of Masca.
The station wrote on X: “All indications point to it being Jay Slater, the young British man who disappeared on 17 June in Tenerife.
“The first investigations point to an accident or fall in the area,” it added.
Police said in a statement: “The mountain rescue and intervention group of the Civil Guard has located the lifeless body of a young man in the Masca area after 29 days of constant search.
“Given the complexity of the case, the discovery has been possible thanks to the incessant and discreet search carried out by the Civil Guard during these 29 days, in which the natural space was preserved so that it would not be filled with curious onlookers.
“All indications indicate that it could be the young British man who has been missing since June 17 in the absence of full identification.
“The first investigations reveal that he could have suffered an accident fall in the inaccessible area where he was found.”
Slater has been missing since June 17, when he disappeared after attending a music festival on the island.
Police believe he returned to a rented accommodation in the village of Masca with two British tourists he had befriended at the NRG music festival, which was taking place that weekend in the popular holiday destination of Costa Adeje.
He was last heard from at around 08:00 BST the following day (June 17) when he phoned his friend Lucy Law, telling her he had missed a bus and had tried to walk the 10-hour journey but was lost.
He said he needed water and only had one per cent battery left on his phone.
His phone then cut off, and his last known location was shown as the Rural de Teno Park.
Rescue efforts centred on the national park, situated on the other side of Tenerife to where Slater and his friends were staying.
For two weeks, the Guardia Civil conducted an extensive search of the remote, mountainous area north-west of the island where Slater’s was last seen.
Local police ended up calling off their search effort on June 30, but their investigation remained open.
On Sunday, his mum Debbie Duncan said her family “cannot put into words” the heartache they have experienced since her son’s disappearance.