Family of British man missing in Ukraine ‘worried and concerned’ for whereabouts
Christopher Parry was last seen heading to town of Soledar on 6 January
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Your support makes all the difference.The parents of one of two British men missing in Ukraine have said they are worried about their son’s welfare following his disappearance.
The men were last seen on 6 January heading to the town of Soledar, where fighting has been especially fierce in recent days. There has been no contact with the pair since they left Kramatorsk at 8am on Friday.
The two missing men have been identified as Andrew Bagshaw, 48, and Christopher Parry, 28.
Christine Parry, the mother of Mr Parry, a humanitarian volunteer who was helping evacuate civilians, told MailOnline: “It’s all very raw at the moment. We are just trying to inform family members about what is going on.”
His father Robin Parry was quoted as saying: “We are all very proud of Chris and the work he has been doing.”
Mr Parry, who was reportedly born in Truro, Cornwall, but later moved to Cheltenham, had previously spoken of evacuating people from the front line. He told Sky News last year: “Sometimes, when you see some pretty terrible things it does stay with you.”
Mr Parry said his parents were “proud (but) very concerned” when he told them of his plans to go to Ukraine.
In a statement released by the Foreign Office, his family said: “We are very worried and concerned about the health and whereabouts of Chris right now.
“He is an extraordinary person who is compassionate and caring and would not be dissuaded from his work in Ukraine liberating elderly and disabled people, which we are very proud of.
“We, his family and partner, all love him very much and would be grateful if our privacy could be respected at this difficult time.”
Mr Bagshaw, a resident of New Zealand, was in Ukraine to assist in delivering humanitarian aid, according to New Zealand media reports.
A statement on behalf of his parents said: “Andrew is a very intelligent, independently minded person, who went there as a volunteer to assist the people of Ukraine, believing it to be the morally right thing to do.
“Andrew’s parents love him dearly and are immensely proud of all the work he has been doing delivering food and medicines and assisting elderly people move from near the battlefront of the war.”
Brad Hendrickson, a delivery driver turned evacuation volunteer in Ukraine, told BBC Radio 4’s World At One programme he saw Mr Bagshaw two days before he went missing.
Asked if he has got used to people going missing, Mr Hendrickson said: “No, it’s not something we get used to, it is rare, and it is a big deal.
“And just a day or two before he went missing, we crossed paths again and had a nice little chat, handshake, catch-up - ‘how’s it going, you’re off in this direction, I’m off in this direction’, and so forth.
“And of course, you just expect to see your buddy around.
“I know the road - I was on there, the same one, a day or two prior - it’s hard to hear that he was on a road that obviously, in hindsight, would have been far better to see him not going toward.
“But I mean, that’s the nature of the work and his willingness to get in there and do his part to help people.
The route the pair are supposed to take, which The Independent has seen, skirts the edge of the town close to Russian positions and may have actually entered areas engulfed by a moving frontline, as Moscow launched a major assault.
“We don’t know what happened, but we worry,” said a friend and local volunteer, who declined to give his name said yesterday. “They may not have known where the Russian positions were.”
Another Ukrainian volunteer in the east told The Independent that search parties were launched to try to find Mr Bagshaw and Mr Parry after they went missing.
A Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office spokesman said: “We are supporting the families of two British men who have gone missing in Ukraine.”
It comes after five Britons were released by Russian-backed forces in Ukraine in September.
It is understood that Aiden Aslin, Shaun Pinner, John Harding, Dylan Healy and Andrew Hill were released and flown back to Britain.
With additional reporting from PA
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