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Tragic Discovery: Canadian Tourist Found Dead on Australian Beach Amid Dingoes

CBC
January 19, 20263 days ago
'Horrific scene' as Canadian tourist found dead in Australia, body surrounded by dingoes

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A Canadian tourist, aged 19, was found dead on a K'gari beach, Australia, surrounded by dingoes. Police are investigating the circumstances, as it's unclear if she drowned or was attacked by the animals. Markings on her body suggest dingo interference. A post-mortem will determine the cause of death.

Police in Queensland, Australia, are investigating the death of a 19-year-old Canadian woman after her body was found on a beach on Monday surrounded by dingoes. Police were called to the beach on K'gari, formerly called Fraser Island, at 6:35 a.m. local time, according to a news release. The woman had reportedly told friends she was going for a swim around 5 a.m. In a news conference, Wide Bay Burnett District Patrol Insp. Paul Algie said the Canadian citizen had been working at a backpacker's hostel on the island for the past six weeks. Two men found her body on the beach surrounded by "approximately 10 dingoes" and called the police, he said. She was confirmed dead shortly after police arrived, and they were able to confirm her identity, which Algie only described as a 19-year-old Canadian national. She was working on K'gari with a friend from Canada. It's too early to speculate on the cause of death, Algie said. "We simply can't confirm whether this young lady drowned or died as a result of being attacked by dingoes," Algie told local media in a news conference. But, he added, "there were markings on her body consistent with being touched and interfered with by the dingoes." A post-mortem is scheduled for Wednesday, at which point officials hope to have more answers, he said. Algie told local media the Queensland police have reached out to the RCMP to inform the woman's family. CBC News has contacted the RCMP and Global Affairs Canada for more information. The Queensland Police Service told CBC News it had no further updates at this time. In a post on X, Queensland police asked anyone with relevant information to come forward. A 'horrific' scene The two men were driving near the beach north of Maheno Shipwreck when they saw a pack of dingoes surrounding the woman's body. "It was obviously a very traumatic and horrific scene for them to uncover," Algie said in the news conference. The woman's friend, who is also Canadian, is "extremely traumatized," he said. The Maheno Shipwreck is one of the most famous landmarks on K'gari, and is located on 75 Mile Beach. According to the Fraser Tours website, tourists travel from all over the world to take sunrise photos at the wreck. "She was a young woman enjoying a beautiful part of the world, and that’s what makes this such a tragedy," Algie said. Dingoes are protected on K'gari as a native species, according to the Queensland government Parks and Forests website. "K'gari is a wilderness area," Algie warned. "Dingoes are wild animals, and whilst they are very culturally significant to the local First Nations people and to the people that live on the island, they are still wild animals and need to be treated as such."

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    Canadian Tourist Dead in Australia, Dingoes Found