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No sign of priest carried away by party balloons

Searchers scanned the waters off Brazil's southern Atlantic coast on Tuesday for a Roman Catholic priest who disappeared after floating into the sky under hundreds of helium party balloons.
Adelir Antonio de Carli
Roman Catholic priest Adelir Antonio de Carli talks with a journalist before floating off using party balloons in Paranagua, Brazil, on Sunday.Renita Pelissari / Agencia O Globo via AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

Searchers scanned the waters off Brazil's southern Atlantic coast on Tuesday for a Roman Catholic priest who disappeared after floating into the sky under hundreds of helium party balloons.

Rescuers in helicopters and small fishing boats spent a second day seeking signs of the Rev. Adelir Antonio de Carli, said the treasurer of his Sao Cristovao parish, Denise Gallas.

Carli lifted off Sunday afternoon from the port city of Paranagua, wearing a helmet, thermal suit and a parachute.

He was reported missing about eight hours later after losing contact with port authority officials. Authorities later saw pieces of balloons floating in the sea off the coast of Santa Catarina state close to where Carli last made contact.

"We have no reason at this point to believe he is not still alive. He may be floating in the ocean, on some isolated beach or on land somewhere," said Paulo Eduardo Neves, a commander of one of the fire departments searching for Carli.

Stunt was to raise money
The priest was trying to break a 19-hour record for the most hours flying with balloons to fund a spiritual rest stop for truckers in Paranagua, home to Brazil's largest grain port. Brazilian truckers often spend days waiting to unload in the port, especially during the busy soy export season now under way.

Image: Roman Catholic priest Adelir Antonio de Carli flies in a harness-like seat suspended from balloons in Paranagua
Roman Catholic priest Adelir Antonio de Carli, 42, flies in a harness-like seat suspended from 1,000 balloons of various colors in the southern port of Paranagua April 20, 2008. The Brazilian priest is missing after he drifted out to sea while trying to set a record for a flight using helium-filled party balloons, authorities said on April 22, 2008 . De Carli, who flew around 55 miles (90km) before losing contact, had wanted to draw attention to the work of his parish in Paranagua, which targets mostly truck drivers who transport goods to and from the port. Picture taken on April 20, 2008. REUTERS/Handout (BRAZIL) QUALITY FROM SOURCE. FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY. NOT FOR SALE FOR MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS.X80001

Parishioners were maintaining a vigil for Carli, confident that he would be found.

"Without a doubt they will find him alive," Gallas said. "He's alive somewhere out there."

Video of Carli showed the smiling 41-year-old priest slipping into a flight suit and being strapped to a seat attached to a huge cluster of green, red, white and yellow balloons. He then soared into the air to cheers from a crowd.

According to Gallas, the priest at one point soared to an altitude of 20,000 feet. He planned to fly to the city of Dourados, 465 miles northwest of his parish, but was blown in another direction. He was located about 30 miles off the coast when he last contacted Paranagua's port authority.

Experienced at skydiving
Carli reportedly had a GPS device, a satellite phone, a buoyant chair and is an experienced skydiver.

Seas were calm Tuesday in the area where Carli disappeared, and the ocean's temperature was a mild 68 degrees Fahrenheit, rescue leader Neves said.

"Depending on his physical fitness and how badly, if at all, he was injured, he could probably survive in the water for at least five days, maybe a bit more," Neves said.