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Rescued backpacker lost 12kg during outback ordeal

Rescued backpacker lost 12kg during outback ordeal

Perth Now19 hours ago
A German backpacker who spent almost two weeks lost in the outback after abandoning her bogged van lost more than 10 kilograms during her ordeal.
Carolina Wilga was found by a driver on Friday, after disappearing on June 29 near the remote WA town of Beacon, about 300km northeast of Perth.
The 26-year-old returned to social media on Monday night, posting photos from her hospital bed in Perth.
Ms Wilga is playfully smiling and holding a bunch of flowers in one image, surrounded by a vast array of food.
"When you need to gain 12 kilograms back," the Instagram caption read.
The second image is a close-up of the tasty delicacies, including chocolate and pastries.
"Thanks to the German Consulate," the caption said.
Ms Wilga suffered cuts, bruises, dehydration and fatigue during her ordeal in bushland, where overnight temperatures fell to almost zero.
In a statement on Monday, she thanked her rescuers and explained why she left her Mitsubishi van, which police found about 35km from a main track in a dense bush nature reserve.
"Some people might wonder why I even left my car, even though I had water, food and clothing there," she said in the statement issued by WA Police.
"The answer is: I lost control of the car and rolled down a slope. In the crash, I hit my head significantly.
"As a result of the accident, I left my car in a state of confusion and got lost."
Ms Wilga also thanked the driver who found her, describing the woman named Tania as a "rescuer and angel".
"Western Australia has taught me what it really means to be part of a true community," she said.
She believes she survived because of an "incredible outpouring of support".
"The thought of all the people who believed in me, searched for me, and kept hoping for me gave me the strength to carry on during my darkest moments," she said.
"For this, I want to say thank you from the bottom of my heart."
Police previously said Ms Wilga spent just one night with her van after it got bogged in the Karroun Hill Nature Reserve bushland.
She followed the sun and walked 24km west, thinking that would be her best bet of finding a road.
She had minimal food and water and was in the elements for 11 nights.
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Inside the search for missing backpacker Carolina Wilga
Inside the search for missing backpacker Carolina Wilga

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Inside the search for missing backpacker Carolina Wilga

Police found the 1995 Mitsubishi Delica had run into mechanical problems, and believed Wilga had tried to use recovery board and bits of wood to free the car, which had become bogged in a patch of mud. However, like in Podmore's case, there was no sign of the backpacker. Details about the ensuing days remain a mystery, but the hunt for Wilga came to an end on Friday when she was rescued by a station owner returning from Beacon along a remote bush road. Tania Henley told media Wilga stumbled out from the bushes and waved her down. Wilga has offered little insight into her 11 nights in the bush, but said she survived by sleeping in a cave, drinking from puddles and using the sun as her guide. Loading Bush survivalist instructor Mike Cook said it was clear the backpacker had luck on her side. 'It's a harsh environment, and it's quite difficult to navigate without aids … it's difficult to get any sort of sense of where you are, if you're not familiar with solar navigation,' he said. 'It sounds like she had some idea about trying to sort of pick a direction and head west after she decided to leave her car.' Cook said any traveller looking to drive east in WA should be conscious of the lack of water in the region as it borders the desert. 'You have to go with the mindset that if you did break down, you should be right for a solid week, at least with sufficient water and stuff like that,' he said. Wilga's van was stocked with days' worth of food and water. The traveller said she was disorientated when she decided to walk away from the area carrying no supplies. Searchers confirmed the bushland was hard going, with low shrubbery and very little distinct terrain to help someone who was lost. Posting to social media from Fiona Stanley Hospital on Tuesday, Wilga joked she would need to gain '12 kilos back' after her ordeal, but still has not spoken about what she went through. Celebrity agent and public relations expert Max Markson said the backpacker, who spent her fifth night in hospital on Tuesday, would probably be fielding calls from media outlets across the country wanting to share her story, with Nine's 60 Minutes and Seven's Spotlight showing interest. Loading 'They're the ones who would do the story and do it properly – as opposed to 15 minutes, they'd do 30 minutes of television,' he said. Markson said Wilga could ask for between $50,000 and $100,000 to exclusively share her ordeal. 'I think it's really important to have someone who can not just represent her for this deal, but for other deals that will happen – I'm sure there'll be a magazine deal at one stage,' he said.

Inside the search for missing backpacker Carolina Wilga
Inside the search for missing backpacker Carolina Wilga

The Age

time5 hours ago

  • The Age

Inside the search for missing backpacker Carolina Wilga

Police found the 1995 Mitsubishi Delica had run into mechanical problems, and believed Wilga had tried to use recovery board and bits of wood to free the car, which had become bogged in a patch of mud. However, like in Podmore's case, there was no sign of the backpacker. Details about the ensuing days remain a mystery, but the hunt for Wilga came to an end on Friday when she was rescued by a station owner returning from Beacon along a remote bush road. Tania Henley told media Wilga stumbled out from the bushes and waved her down. Wilga has offered little insight into her 11 nights in the bush, but said she survived by sleeping in a cave, drinking from puddles and using the sun as her guide. Loading Bush survivalist instructor Mike Cook said it was clear the backpacker had luck on her side. 'It's a harsh environment, and it's quite difficult to navigate without aids … it's difficult to get any sort of sense of where you are, if you're not familiar with solar navigation,' he said. 'It sounds like she had some idea about trying to sort of pick a direction and head west after she decided to leave her car.' Cook said any traveller looking to drive east in WA should be conscious of the lack of water in the region as it borders the desert. 'You have to go with the mindset that if you did break down, you should be right for a solid week, at least with sufficient water and stuff like that,' he said. Wilga's van was stocked with days' worth of food and water. The traveller said she was disorientated when she decided to walk away from the area carrying no supplies. Searchers confirmed the bushland was hard going, with low shrubbery and very little distinct terrain to help someone who was lost. Posting to social media from Fiona Stanley Hospital on Tuesday, Wilga joked she would need to gain '12 kilos back' after her ordeal, but still has not spoken about what she went through. Celebrity agent and public relations expert Max Markson said the backpacker, who spent her fifth night in hospital on Tuesday, would probably be fielding calls from media outlets across the country wanting to share her story, with Nine's 60 Minutes and Seven's Spotlight showing interest. Loading 'They're the ones who would do the story and do it properly – as opposed to 15 minutes, they'd do 30 minutes of television,' he said. Markson said Wilga could ask for between $50,000 and $100,000 to exclusively share her ordeal. 'I think it's really important to have someone who can not just represent her for this deal, but for other deals that will happen – I'm sure there'll be a magazine deal at one stage,' he said.

Carolina Wilga search triggers uncomfortable questions for families of missing Indigenous men
Carolina Wilga search triggers uncomfortable questions for families of missing Indigenous men

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time5 hours ago

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Carolina Wilga search triggers uncomfortable questions for families of missing Indigenous men

The discovery of missing German backpacker Carolina Wilga, who survived 11 nights alone in the West Australian outback, was met with joy and relief across the country. Ms Wilga was found walking down an unsealed access road late last week by a local farmer, after an intensive police search and several days of widespread media coverage. From her hospital bed, Ms Wilga thanked authorities and the community who rallied together to find her, adding that she had only survived "thanks to this incredible outpouring of support". But this remarkable story of survival has also triggered an uncomfortable question among families of others who have gone missing in remote WA: do we care more about some missing people than others? In recent years, half a dozen young Aboriginal men have vanished in the north of the state in mysterious circumstances, in cases that have triggered a fraction of the public interest. And their families, still searching for answers, feel that a lack of attention on the cases of these missing men has made it harder to find them. Within the past three years, at least five young Aboriginal men have disappeared in regional WA, in a variety of circumstances. In October 2022, Clinton Lockyer and Wesley Lockyer disappeared just a week apart in the Pilbara region, after socialising with friends and relatives in the hours prior. Less than a month later, Wylie Oscar's vehicle was found on a remote bush track near Fitzroy Crossing, stocked with food and water. Zane Stevens was last seen near his bogged car on the coast near Broome in April 2024. And Brenton Shar vanished after a night-time walk in the coastal city of Geraldton in May 2024. The WA government has offered a $500,000 reward to help solve these long-term missing persons cases. But there have so far been no confirmed sightings of any of the men, nor remains found. Their families have been left in a type of torturous limbo that psychologists refer to as "ambiguous loss". And they feel strongly there has been less police and public attention because these missing men are Aboriginal. "It sounds cruel to say, but when an Aboriginal male goes missing, most of the public don't care," says private investigator Robyn Cottman, who is representing the families of the missing men. Clinton Lockyer's aunty, Annalee Lockyer, says the perceived indifference adds to their grief. "Of course we're all glad the backpacker is alive, but it did hurt to see all the coverage," she says. "You think, does anyone care about our boys the same way? It's not nice to feel like their lives don't even matter — it really hurts." The reasons that some missing persons cases trigger urgent searches while others fly under the radar are complex, but Ms Cottman believes racism is a factor. "I think there's racial profiling going on — it's easy to dismiss Indigenous males as 'gone walkabout' or 'gone bush', so there's no urgency trying to locate them," she says. "Then you've got a female German backpacker who's alone in the bush, all of a sudden it's critical that she's found as quickly as possible. "There just seem to be two different standards here." WA Police has rejected the suggestion that racism or neglect have affected the searches for the five missing Aboriginal men. "Missing persons, regardless of where they are reported missing, are treated as a priority for the WA Police Force," it told the ABC in a statement. "All investigations into missing persons are conducted using the same underpinning processes and procedures. Each report of a missing person is assessed and resourced appropriately based on a wide range of factors including the specific circumstances of each case and information known to officers at the time. "Not knowing what happened to a loved one is confronting and challenging for the families and friends of missing persons, and WA Police remains committed to finding answers for those families and communities." Ms Wilga's case prompted widespread media attention, with hundreds of online news articles published on her disappearance over the course of a couple of weeks. It is difficult to compare coverage of these missing persons cases, especially considering Ms Wilga's miraculous survival and the international interest given she was a German tourist visiting Australia. But while the families of Aboriginal men missing in WA have made public appeals for information about their loved ones, there have been significantly fewer headlines about these men in the years since they were last seen. Private investigator Robyn Cottman says she can understand why Ms Wilga's case attracted escalating attention. "It creates a more sensational story when it's an international person who is a female alone in the bush," she reflects. Ms Cottman also notes the public seems to engage less when there is a suspicion of drug use or criminality in the missing person's life, even if that suspicion is untrue or unrelated to their disappearance. Media coverage of Indigenous missing persons can also be complicated by cultural factors — in some cases, families request that the name and image of their loved one not be published. Ms Wilga is not the first foreign tourist to trigger a large-scale outback search and a media storm. WA Premier Roger Cook compared her disappearance to that of American man Robert Bogucki in 1999, who was found alive after six weeks in the Great Sandy Desert. The search for Mr Bogucki attracted worldwide media attention and cost Australian authorities up to $10,000 a day — and that was before his family spent $80,000 flying a specialist American unit to head into the vast desert to try to retrieve his body. But not every family has those resources, and not every missing person has a straightforward storyline. Retired Aboriginal police officer Lindsay Greatorex, who helped search for Mr Bogucki in 1999, says the local men who have gone missing deserve the same level of care and attention. "Are they getting lost, or has there been foul play? It remains a mystery with a lot of these disappearances because remains haven't been found," he told the ABC's Expanse: Nowhere Man podcast. One thing these cases do have in common is the legacy of hurt and confusion for those left behind. Each year around 35,000 people are reported missing in Australia, but only a fraction of those cases trigger a physical search. According to search and rescue expert Jim Whitehead, an average of around 10 searches begin every day around the country, with around 97 per cent of people found alive. In each case, a form called a Search Urgency Assessment is completed to determine the response required. It captures risk factors such as the person's age, mental state, access to equipment, and the weather and terrain they are facing. "Often you do have families that are upset and angry because they feel like not enough is being done to find their loved one," Dr Whitehead says. He says one of the biggest challenges for search-and-rescue operations is when the person's last known location is unclear, because it means they could be thousands of kilometres away, requiring an unrealistic search radius. "And if it's unclear if they've entered a vehicle … well, that means they might have travelled to a different part of the country," Dr Whitehead adds. Another factor that can make searches more challenging is when there's a delay in the person being reported missing, "perhaps because they have an itinerant lifestyle", Dr Whitehead says. Again, it is difficult to make direct comparisons between cases because of the lack of clarity around the timeline of initial reporting and behind-the-scenes steps taken by police. In the case of Carolina Wilga, it's not clear exactly when her friends first raised concerns with police. The first police press release came seven days after her last contact with friends in Fremantle, suggesting she was reported missing within a few days of dropping out of contact. In the cases of the Aboriginal men from northern Australia, it took between five and 10 days for the initial missing persons reports to be made. However, some family members claim they did make approaches to police earlier, but that these were not taken seriously by local officers. Dr Whitehead, who does not have specific knowledge of the West Australian cases, says delays in reporting a missing person are generally not due to a lack of care or concern. Often this can be linked to a deeply rooted distrust of police, or a reflection of the more transient lifestyle many locals live, or limited access to telecommunications in many remote areas. Dr Whitehead says another complicating factor is that Aboriginal people are more likely to go missing in remote parts of the country, where there are minimal police resources to undertake large-scale searches. "Sometimes people feel we should be doing more as police, and in some cases that's absolutely true," he says. "But … search and rescue takes up a small amount of police time compared with everything else they have to do, so it doesn't have a huge amount of resources." Recent research does point to an over-representation of Indigenous people among missing persons in Australia. Exclusive data provided to the ABC in 2019 showed Aboriginal people accounted for 17.5 per cent of unsolved missing persons cases in Western Australia, despite making up just 3 per cent of the state's population. Six years on, national figures on the rates of Indigenous missing persons cases remain patchy, with a recent Senate inquiry into missing and murdered First Nations women and children recommending an urgent review to address this data gap by the end of 2025. That inquiry received dozens of submissions, including one from Darumbal and South Sea Islander academic Amy McQuire, Sisters Inside and the Institute for Collaborative Race Research, which summarised "Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people are more likely to go missing, and less likely to be found". The final Senate inquiry report, published in August 2024, noted that systemic racism and discrimination, as well as disparities in media reporting, had historically hampered investigations into the whereabouts of First Nations people. As Indigenous missing persons advocate Martin Hodgson has pointed out, a legacy of distrust remains, despite improvements in practices and attitudes. "The reality is, there are people who've gone missing from remote parts of Australia and they've never even been reported to police, because of the deep distrust that remains," he told the ABC earlier this year. Dr Whitehead, who oversaw search-and-rescue operations for Queensland police for almost 20 years, acknowledges the issue. But he believes the situation has improved. "There's still a long way to go, but the increase in training on cultural sensitivity and the use of liaison officers has gone a long way," he says. "So I'm confident that most of the time, the search-and-rescue response is the same, no matter who you are." For Annalee Lockyer, and the families of the other Aboriginal men who are missing in Western Australia, there is still hope that the public can help find a resolution. "We've been trying to conduct our own searches for Clinton, but we don't have the resources," she says. "All of the support and interest to find the backpacker … I feel like our boys deserve that too."

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