The miraculous survival of German backpacker Carolina Wilga in the West Australian outback was met with joy and relief across the country. But for families of missing Aboriginal men who are still searching for answers, it’s prompted uncomfortable questions.


“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.”

  • @DiaDeLosMuertos@aussie.zone
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    613 days ago

    If a young Aboriginal man was driving around Germany in the wilderness and got lost, I’m extremely sure that the authorities would conduct a search to find him.

    I imagine that the number of missing persons in Germany is a pretty sizable figure. They don’t conduct a search for all of those people.

      • @Nath@aussie.zoneM
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        712 days ago

        Well, a young American dude went missing in the desert in WA in the 90’s and that had wall-to-wall coverage in the news for weeks until he was found also.

        I think @DiaDeLosMuertos is right - the driving factor in the interest was that he was a tourist, not that he was any particular nationality/gender. So yes: I think a young Turkish bloke going missing would get just as much coverage.