'It would be a miracle' if missing teenager is alive, say Nunavut RCMP - Action News
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'It would be a miracle' if missing teenager is alive, say Nunavut RCMP

Ambar Roy, 18, has not been seen since a sighting on March 13 in Iqaluit. RCMP say they found footprints leading out of the city and there's 'faint hope' that he is still alive.

Ambar Roy, 18, last seen by taxi driver on March 13 when he was dropped off near Road to Nowhere

Ambar Roy, 18, has not been seen since a sighting on March 13 in Iqaluit. RCMP say they found footprints leading out of the city and it's believed he may not be alive. (RCMP)

RCMP in Iqaluit say there'sa "faint hope" that Ambar Roy, an18-year-old Ontario university student who's been missing for more than a week, is alive.

Roy has been missing since March 13 in the Nunavut capital. The University in Waterloo student was in Iqaluit to visit his parents.

RCMP said on Monday thatthey found tracks in the snow leading out of the city and they're believed to be Roy's. They say some of the tracks indicatethat the person wasmissing one shoe. The tracks were found on Friday about 10 kilometres from the city.

"[There's] that faint hope," said Staff Sgt. Garfield Elliott. "But the reality is, it's a difficult reality to make that determination, but it would be a miracle."

"He was not dressed for those types of elements or conditions ... inthose types of conditions, it's grave."

'There's that faint hope,' says RCMP Staff Sgt. Garfield Elliott. (Jackie McKay/CBC)

Roy was scheduled to fly out of Iqaluit and back to Waterloo, Ont., on March 12. He had only arrived the day before, but his parents say they fought with the teenager that day, and Roy wanted to return to school immediately. He went to the airport on Tuesday but never got on his flight.

RCMPinitially said that Roy was last seen at the airport again on March 14, but they now saythat is not the case.

Now they say the last known sighting is March 13, when a taxi driver dropped the teenager off by the Road to Nowhere.

RCMP and dozens of searchers have been combing the city for the last two weeks looking for any signs of Roy. His parents told CBC last week that they were holding out hope that he would found alive.

Garfield said the RCMP have been "bracing the family" for the reality that he may not be found alive.

The search was suspended on Monday due to poor weather conditions in Iqaluit.

The RCMP's map indicating where Roy was sighted and where barefoot tracks were seen near the Road to Nowhere. (Jackie McKay/CBC)

Based on reporting by Jackie McKay