A 26 -year -old German tourist was found alive Friday after wandering twelve days in the bush. For the police, she experienced an incredible event in an isolated region of western Australia.
‘Carolina Wilga was devoured by mosquitoes. She obviously went through an incredible test ‘, a police officer from the State of Australia-Western State said on Friday, welcoming his bravery’.
TV images have shown the young woman dressed in a long beige dress and a blue cardigan, prudently amounts to the steps of a small plane to reach a medical center.
Carolina Wilga was found on Friday on a bush path by a person who took him.
Many nursing injuries’
It was transported ‘in a fairly fragile’ state, in Beacon, a small agricultural locality, then at Perth hospital to be treated, said the police.
‘She doesn’t seem to have serious injuries. She obviously suffers from numerous nassip injuries, ‘added Mr. Glynn.
Carolina Wilga had been seen for the last time on June 29 in a Mitsubishi van in front of a Beacon store.
Police found this abandoned vehicle on Thursday after being stuck in a dense bush, about two hours away from the place where the young woman had been seen before vanishing in the wild. This discovery had sparked major land and air research in the area.
The van was equipped with orange plastic caterpillars that the German tourist would have placed under the rear wheels after having apparently embellished.
A very hostile ‘environment
‘She obviously overcome exceptional conditions. The environment is very hostile, both from the point of view of fauna and flora. It is an environment really very difficult to manage, ‘said Martin Glynn, adding that testimonies had made it in the past.
‘The weather conditions were very unfavorable, with temperatures descending to zero. It rained at night, ‘he continued.
The young woman ‘obviously traveled a long way to try to get out of it’, noted the policeman.
Carolina Wilga’s family has been warned, he added.
According to police, the young woman spent two years traveling backpack in Australia and working on mining sites in Australia-Western.
‘I think that when we hear his story, it will be a remarkable story’, said the policeman.
‘We are constantly confronted with these kinds of situations and it is obviously a joy when it ends like that. This fully justifies all the efforts made ‘, he was delighted.
/ATS