
Inside country where backpacker defied odds
Locals have described the area where Ms Wilga vanished as harsh and unforgiving, with a maze of gravel roads winding through dry, empty bushland.
Police located the missing backpacker's Mitsubishi Delica Star Wagon at Karroun Hill on the fringe of Western Australia's wheatbelt on Friday, but there was no sign of Ms Wilga herself.
Wheatbelt resident Tilly Elizabeth, who lives on a farm not far from Beacon, said the area around Karroun Hill was 'deserted'.
'There's been a few disappearances in the area,' she said.
'There's a lot of wheat and sheep farming, it's pretty deserted, I can drive along a dirt road and not see anyone.
'There's not many people around even in Beacon or Dalwallinu, we're very spread out.
'Out this way, it's just rocks and barren land.' The Mitsubishi Delica van that was driven by Carolina Wilga was located abandoned in the Karroun Hill area. WA Police Credit: Supplied
Ms Elizabeth said the nature reserve was known to locals but rarely visited by outsiders.
'Karroun Hill is a lookout, it's not super popular, it's not really on the way to anything' she said.
'I go exploring through there all the time, but I get nervous if I'm in an area I don't know.'
She said while the lookout attracts the occasional visitor, it is easy to become disoriented, even for those who know the region well.
'The locals know the tracks really well, but it's so easy to get lost or stuck out here, it's all unsealed roads,
'Take a few turns on a gravel road and you can't find your way back. I get nervous if I'm not sure if there's an end or if it will connect up to bitumen,
Ms Elizabeth said rain can quickly change the landscape and plunging night-time temperatures make survival even harder.
'Rain can cover up your tracks, and at the moment it's freezing, just a couple of degrees at night,' she said.
'People can underestimate WA.' Ms Wilga was last seen in Beacon after travelling through regional Western Australia. WA Police. Credit: Supplied
Police said the weather had made search efforts difficult, but noted it would have been 'a thousand time worse' for Ms Wilga.
'As you can imagine from the trauma she's suffered for the last few days, she's been through a great deal,' Inspector Martin Glynn said.
'It's a really, really challenging environment to cope in and the weather conditions have been really adverse with temperatures getting down to 0 degrees at night, there's been rain.
'It must have been a thousand times worse for her in her condition.
Ms Elizabeth said the discovery of Carolina Wilga has brought immense relief to the remote wheatbelt community.
'The community is ecstatic, we've all cracked a beer for her,' she said.
'No one wants to be known as the place people go missing, we were fearing the worst.
'It's tough country, she must be a tough girl.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
18 hours ago
- ABC News
Police say new leads being pursued after baby's body found in Alexander Heights stormwater drain
Police say they are pursuing a number of new leads in the search for the mother of a newborn baby whose body was found in a storm drain in suburban Perth. Maintenance workers who were clearing storm drains and conducting checks on La Salle Road in Alexander Heights discovered the baby boy's body on Monday afternoon. Police say the baby was put in the drain in recent days and are urgently chasing the identity and location of the mother. "Not only are there concerns about the mother's health, but also mental health, and family surrounding the mother," WA Police Commissioner Col Blanch said. The circumstances surrounding the baby's death were still being investigated. Commissioner Blanch said detectives had been chasing clues since the grim discovery, ranging from eye-witness accounts to forensic evidence. "We've got some leads. And as always with Crime Stoppers and people ringing up, there is lots of things that people have seen," he said. "The job now is to sift through which ones may be relevant and which ones may not. They will follow everything down." The commissioner urged the public to alert authorities to any information they have, even if it does not seem relevant. "If you're in the area, just ring up Crime Stoppers and tell us what you saw," he said. Police say forensic tests of evidence from the scene have been completed but analysis was still ongoing. The incident has been described by WA Premier Roger Cook as a "horrifying scenario", and police have previously said it was a "distressing" scene for both the workers who found the body, and for first responders at the scene. Residents in the area have voiced their shock, with some leaving flowers at the scene as a tribute to the baby boy. "Even though it was so heartbreakingly sad of how the baby left this earth, while it was here it was still a human," resident Sarah said on Tuesday. "It's not just a baby in a drain."

ABC News
18 hours ago
- ABC News
WA Police seize $18 million worth of drugs, cash and a Ferrari in Perth organised crime crackdown
More than $18 million dollars in drugs has been taken off the streets of Western Australia, as methamphetamine use skyrockets across the state. In operations during June and July, WA Police officers seized almost 40 kilograms of methamphetamine, more than $800,000 in cash, three firearms and a Ferrari. The vehicle will be sold, the expected $500,000 in proceeds to go back into the community. The haul removed hundreds of thousands of drug hits from the streets, with nine people charged. The drug haul comes amid skyrocketing meth use across regional WA, with levels in Perth at an almost 10-year high. Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission principal drug specialist Shane Neilsen said an increasing demand for illicit stimulants in WA pointed to a demand that was "resistant to treatment". "That's the thing we constantly advocate [for] is treatment for and also education to stop people taking the drug in the first place, around the dangers that it poses," he said. Mr Neilsen said demand had grown since WA's borders re-opened after COVID, and now exceeded pre-COVID levels. "What we're seeing at the moment is a significant market correction getting back to where it was before COVID," he said. He said it appeared cartels from South America and Mexico were supplying large quantities of cocaine globally. "They're certainly supplying large quantities of the drug into Australia, but they're also doing this into Europe and the United States," he said. "The world is just awash with cocaine at the moment. Australia is no different." The crackdown on organised crime in WA comes as police continue to investigate whether a number of fatal shootings in Sydney this week were gang-related. WA Police Commissioner Col Blanch said the state's tough organised crime laws made it difficult for those involved to live on the west coast. "As soon as they buy that Ferrari, as soon as they buy that house, as soon as they start flashing the cash, we're onto them," he said. "Most organised crime [participants] do not reside at the higher levels in WA. They reside over east or they reside offshore. "We've had two fatal shootings in New South Wales just in the last two days that is suspected to be gang related. "So we can see some of the origins of this serious crime is coming from the east coast of Australia and our job is to prevent it from coming to the community of WA." Commissioner Blanch said the amount of drugs seized in Australia exceeded the consumption of the drug itself. "There's no doubt that West Australians prefer meth as a drug, but when we look at it in totality with cocaine and heroin, which are two other drugs that are used consistently across the country, we're well down the chains," he said. He said a multi-agency approach was needed to support users and slash demand for illicit substances. "Anyone using drugs in WA, particularly methamphetamine, we should help them get off the drugs so that demand decreases," he said.

ABC News
a day ago
- ABC News
WA Police planting e-scooters as bait at shopping centres to catch thieves
WA Police are placing e-scooters outside shopping centres for people to steal, in a "proactive" operation that a human rights advocate says is inducing disadvantaged people to commit crime. A court transcript obtained by the ABC detailed proceedings in the Armadale Magistrates Court in Perth's south-east on May 26, when the police operation was brought to light. The document revealed a 21-year-old man had been charged with stealing an electric scooter that was "property of the Commissioner of Police" and valued at $800. The incident took place in Bentley on May 3. "Police positioned an electronic rideable scooter by the front entrance of a shopping centre as part of a proactive police operation to combat the theft of e-scooters in the area," the police prosecutor said. Minutes after the e-scooter was left in position, the 21-year-old turned it on, folded up its stand and rode away — with his actions captured on CCTV, the prosecutor said. He pleaded guilty to the charge and told the court he "fell in the trap". Magistrate Rosemarie Myers labelled the man's behaviour "stupid". "But I have some concerns about the situation that you found yourself in on that day," Magistrate Myers said. The court heard the man was apprehended while riding the scooter and had told police: "I took the scooter to get home quicker, I know I shouldn't have taken it." The man's defence lawyer told the court his client was remorseful. "He's not working, but he's on the Youth Allowance. He instructs me he's looking for a job as well … in the mines," the lawyer said. "He grew up in Narrogin with his grandparents and instructs me his grandfather passed away last year, Your Honour, which has impacted his life since then. "He instructs me his grandmother is [suffering from] cancer at the moment." The magistrate handed the man a one-month conditional release order with a fine of $250. "Don't get yourself caught in the trap again," she told the man. Human rights law expert Dr Hannah McGlade said she was disappointed by the operation and feared it would only further clog up courts and prisons with minor offending matters, rather than addressing root causes such as poverty. "Why would the police be trying to encourage people to actually commit an offence of stealing?" she asked. "We're talking about very poor people who are living under the poverty line. "I think this is very questionable policing practice … and a waste of policing resources." The man was represented in the proceedings by the Aboriginal Legal Service. Dr McGlade said Aboriginal people fared worse in the criminal justice system "at every stage" and this kind of police operation could amplify inequality. "I think the courts should be very sceptical of any matters coming before them where the police have engaged in this kind of tactic," she said. "I don't think we need to be making life harder for people who are already doing it very … tough. We should be supporting and assisting them in their needs." Curtin University senior law lecturer Dr Stephen Monterosso said the incident "sounds like entrapment", but the courts were left to consider whether evidence obtained that way could be used. "We don't really have an entrapment defence in Australia, unlike in America," he said. "Although our courts do retain the discretion to disallow evidence they feel has been induced by police conduct if you like, or abuse of process." Dr Monterosso said it was difficult to find statistics to show whether this method of proactive policing reduced crime. He said while police have used this tactic for a long time, it raised questions about civil liberties. Dr Monterosso said while Australian courts were wary of obtaining evidence by "abuse of process", other police operations required entrapment, including catching paedophiles in online investigations. "They [police operations] really need to be within the requirements not to exceed any boundaries, the courts retain that discretion to disallow evidence," he said. Dr Monterosso said he would be interested to see the yearly police statistics on theft in the district where the e-scooter operation took place. In a statement to the ABC, a WA Police spokesperson said seized or forfeited e-rideables were used in police enforcement activities at "zero cost to the community". "WA Police use a range of lawful tactics to deter and detect crime through covert and overt means aimed at reducing theft and keeping the community safe," they said. When asked by the ABC if the operation resulted in a reduction of e-scooter theft, police failed to produce any data. Police also declined to answer whether the operation was being carried out in other WA Police districts. The spokesperson said their target e-rideables were secured and the decision to steal them "rests" on an individual, who would be "held to account for their actions". "Stealing is classified as a serious offence in Western Australia, punishable by way of heavy fines and a term of imprisonment in some circumstances," they said.