German backpacker found alive after 12 days missing in Australian outback

A road sign stands near Beacon, Western Australia on July 11, 2025, near where missing German backpacker Carolina Wilga was last seen. (ABC News via AP)
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Updated 12 July 2025
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German backpacker found alive after 12 days missing in Australian outback

  • Carolina Wilga vanished on June 29 from near the outback town of Beacon, about 254 kilometers north of Western Australia state capital Perth
  • The backpacker was ‘ravaged by mosquitoes’ during her time stranded in the hostile terrain and was found exhausted

SYDNEY: Australian authorities said they found a 26-year-old German backpacker “safe and well” after she had been missing in a remote part of the country’s northwest for almost two weeks.

Carolina Wilga, who vanished on June 29 from near the outback town of Beacon, about 254 kilometers north of Western Australia state capital Perth, was found by a passing motorist on a road in the region on Friday, police said.

“This is a huge relief for her family and all of her loved ones,” Detective Jessica Securo said on Saturday in a media conference televised from Perth.

“To find Carolina safe and well is a fantastic result.”

Wilga was airlifted to a Perth hospital, where she was stable on Saturday, authorities said.

The backpacker was “ravaged by mosquitoes” during her time stranded in the hostile terrain and was found exhausted, dehydrated and with cuts and bruises, police said.

A large-scale search was initiated for Wilga after her vehicle was found abandoned in the state’s sparsely populated Wheatbelt region, which spans 154,862 square km.

Wilga planned to continue her travels in Australia once recovered, authorities said.


North Korea’s Kim Jong Un signals continued missile development in next 5 years

Updated 11 sec ago
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North Korea’s Kim Jong Un signals continued missile development in next 5 years

  • Kim said “the country’s missile and shell production sector is of paramount importance in bolstering war deterrent,” according to KCNA

SEOUL: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un ​signaled the country will continue to develop missiles in the next five years, as he visited major munitions enterprises in the last ‌quarter of ‌2025, ‌state ⁠media ​KCNA ‌said on Friday.
Kim said “the country’s missile and shell production sector is of paramount importance in bolstering war deterrent,” according to KCNA.
Kim ⁠ratified draft documents for ‌the modernization of ‍major munitions enterprises ‍to be submitted ‍to a key party congress expected to be held in early 2026, KCNA said, ​which will set a development plan for North ⁠Korea for the next five years.
The KCNA report follows Thursday’s reveal of Kim overseeing the construction of an 8,700-ton nuclear-powered submarine with his daughter, a potential heir, and the test-firing ‌of long-range surface-to-air missiles.