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00:15Hello and welcome to the second part of our story into the disappearance of Belgian bushwalker
00:20Celine Cremere. Last week we explained how the 31-year-old went missing in mid-2023
00:27after she ventured alone into Tasmania's beautiful but unforgiving wilderness.
00:33We left you as a highly skilled group of volunteers and Celine's friends
00:38embarked on a forensic search to try to solve the maddening mystery of what happened to her.
00:45Police hold grave concerns for missing Belgian tourist Celine Cremere.
00:50Celine arrived in Australia in June 2022.
00:57She did a world trip from Sydney to Tasmania.
01:01We found Celine's car at the Philosopher Falls car park.
01:04Wet and cold weather has been hampering the aerial search.
01:08Sadly no further signs of Celine were located.
01:11I needed answers.
01:13Not knowing anything is the worst thing that her family could live in.
01:18She was looking for the most direct route to get back to that car park because it was getting dark.
01:24She suddenly goes off the trail and up the hill.
01:27She was really thinking, I've got to get out of here.
01:30What you can see here is the last ping that Celine's phone recorded.
01:34From that point onwards that phone was no longer in range.
01:38She's got to be up there somewhere and it's just going to take the right person looking under the right
01:43log and it's going to be solved.
01:57The reason that this search came about was that Celine's friends really wanted to give their everything to try to
02:06bring home answers.
02:08It's about giving it your all and, you know, properly saying goodbye.
02:17We have been waiting for more than two years and a half with no answer.
02:23A lot of people had asked me, why don't you go there?
02:29How could I have been able to support her, to find the rest of my daughter?
02:38Ariane has really played a central role in communication to help us organize these researches.
02:43I want to do a practical common sense search.
02:47Everyone knows about Celine's case and everybody here has tried to help in some way.
02:56It's going to be mossy, muddy, slippery, a lot of tree roots and you're going to be lots of bending
03:00it up and over and under.
03:01We've got about 28 volunteers. A lot of them are from Tasmania. Some of them have come from interstate. All
03:10in their own time.
03:11Celine spent eight minutes looking on her phone here.
03:15We raised about 15,000 euros. So, yeah, we've been able to pay for the campsites and the food for
03:24all the volunteers.
03:26Should we do a garden salad as well for the ones that...
03:29I've got five wonderful ladies coming along to help cook. The freezers are overflowing just from donations, which is just
03:38amazing.
03:38Can I get you? It's a pushing place.
03:41The inhabitants of Waratah have been very touched by the story of Céline.
03:46Céline!
03:48We are very reconnaissance of what they are going to do for us.
03:57I decided not to be part of the December search just because I didn't feel psychologically able.
04:06So, Gabriel went in Tasmania with his little brother. Then there was Rachel. Rachel was a close friend of Celine
04:14and Johan is Rachel's partner.
04:17The four musketeers, as I call them, because they have a mission, like the musketeers. One for all and all
04:32for one.
04:35I think it was important to discover what happened, really. We can't do anything anymore but find answers.
04:48Rachel put a little collar with a collar that came from the beach where Céline worked, in Coles Bay.
04:57I brought a little Playmobil on the rock. And then I put the shoes of her father.
05:05So, that's it. Everyone has their beliefs, but I think it will bring us a chance.
05:09To begin with, there's some good ground between the falls and the top of the hill. So, we'll start going
05:17up.
05:17I'm going to be with the volunteers from Belgium, so Céline's friends and my dad.
05:22You got good vibes?
05:24Yeah, of course.
05:26They're going to have two teams of 12 in the official search with Ken Gamble.
05:31The first day, everybody was highly motivated. The search conditions were pretty good.
05:39We basically took the route that Céline would have taken and then went to the top of the hill where
05:44our last records of her location were.
05:47Really, to give people an introduction to what sort of vegetation and topography we're going to encounter in the searching.
05:53And if you want to turn your tracking on, now's as good a time as any.
05:56Paul Hellman has been an incredible help. He's a former park ranger for 30 years.
06:03What are we going to start at?
06:04T13.
06:05Where are we now?
06:06We're just north of T12, basically.
06:09We've been able to put together some really good, solid maps.
06:14And we have these grids, these 50-metre grids.
06:17We want to search them thoroughly so that we can eliminate grid by grid by grid.
06:22We're just going to start on this line, 50-metre warm-up, and then really, it should be good stuff.
06:27Since the very first day that, you know, Rob did the video on Céline, I've been looking at maps, studying
06:33maps, the hillshade maps, the slope maps.
06:36I wanted to know everything about there, because anything could be a clue.
06:42Stop!
06:42Found the bracelet!
06:44Found the bracelet!
06:46Do you see it?
06:47Yeah, I can see it.
06:48I do.
06:48The silver one.
06:49I need a torch to make sure that it's a bracelet.
06:52Yeah.
06:52Or if it's like the water.
06:56All right.
06:57All right.
06:57All right.
06:58All right.
06:58All right.
06:59All right.
07:01Back in line, guys.
07:04We are standing exactly on where the last known GPS point says.
07:09What I want to ask you, Rachel.
07:10Yeah.
07:11Do you think that in this spot, it's more likely she would turn back?
07:15Or do you think that she would say, this is thick, but I'm going to go with it?
07:21When you are afraid and cold and it's dark, you don't know.
07:25You don't know your mind is not the same as usual.
07:28And so I'm not sure about that.
07:32So it's 50-50.
07:33Yeah.
07:34You don't think she dropped the phone?
07:35It's possible.
07:36Yeah.
07:36It is possible.
07:41We got to grid number nine.
07:42This is the area immediately in the vicinity of where the last GPS coordinate was.
07:48And I heard someone scream out.
07:50And everybody stopped.
07:52Come over, Nat.
07:54Come over.
07:55Me?
07:56Yes.
07:56Hi, what's up?
07:57I was a straggler.
07:59And the main line had passed through.
08:02And I just stepped over.
08:04And I didn't even finish that step.
08:06And I just looked down where my boot was going and there was...
08:12a surprise.
08:14We found the phone.
08:16We found the phone.
08:17There's a phone.
08:17We found a phone.
08:19And it was just an incredible moment.
08:21All right.
08:22Almost works.
08:23All right, no one touch it.
08:25Just keep everyone away.
08:26No one touch it.
08:27Tony, he's a clean SES member.
08:30He'd been in there 20 or 19 times on his own searching.
08:34You deserved it, mate.
08:35You've been in here the most.
08:36You've done so much effort.
08:38Yep.
08:39Mate.
08:40I'd been up there two metres away from that phone.
08:43I turned to the west.
08:45But this time, I turned to the east.
08:49It was unexpected for me.
08:51I was like, how is it possible?
08:55It's incredible.
08:58Holy shit.
08:59It's perfect.
09:00It's not an iPhone.
09:01That's good.
09:01It's a Samsung.
09:02Yes.
09:03They were still trying to figure out the serial number
09:06to confirm it was actually Celine's phone.
09:09Thankfully, I had spoke with Antoine, Gabriel's brother,
09:13before, and sent it to him.
09:1607-80-422-2.
09:21Yeah.
09:21That's it.
09:22It's all right.
09:23That's it.
09:26Wow.
09:31Confirmed by the serial number.
09:32That's great.
09:33I'll let Dean know.
09:36It's amazing.
09:38You OK?
09:38Yeah.
09:41For me, it changed everything about what I feel.
09:44I'm like, OK, now, now I'm sure 100% we can find something.
09:53When I've been advised that the serial number was the right one, for me, it was a miracle.
10:23It was just an incredible find.
10:26So police and SES will resume search efforts in conjunction with the privately organized search.
10:33A mobile phone belonging to missing Belgian tourist Celine Cremere has been discovered in a renewed search.
10:41The mauve-colored Samsung phone has been handed over to police to undergo forensic examination.
10:48So it was a relief, but also a bit painful.
10:54Because I realized at this time what Celine really get through.
11:00How wet, cold, scared, in the dark all alone she might have been.
11:13That second day we had hail, we had thunderstorms, lightning, so we had to call the search off.
11:21It's a little bit frustrating that it's not possible for us to go today.
11:27Because we want to, you know, we want to find something else.
11:31And so everybody's waiting.
11:33Yes.
11:33Yes, ma adolescence.
11:34Yes.
11:35Yes.
11:35But the GSM helped advance an awesome motivation.
11:40.
11:41Now, we know withthere's certainty what she is at this place.
11:47I was wondering why doesn't she made a call when she got lost.
11:54When they have found the phone I understood that she had lost it and that's why she hadn't
12:03made this call.
12:06So I understand a little better what happened.
12:18So day three, the police came and we all agreed to search as a larger team.
12:25Even though this was the middle of summer, it was winter weather in this forest.
12:31So we're in the middle of the day, Waratah, nine degrees, feels like zero.
12:37In our party, by about lunchtime, we were quite disheartened.
12:40We are trying to imagine what she was doing when she dropped the phone.
12:46No, she definitely went over this log because it was found like that.
12:50We had spent the whole morning just crawling under logs and through wet scrub.
13:11It is unfortunate the days where you don't find anything because it is a lot of work and
13:19I am exhausted.
13:21But it was still a step forward because the more grids which we can tick off, the less
13:26likely it is that she's in one of those spots so we can put our people elsewhere.
13:31Good job today.
13:31Yeah.
13:33One step closer.
13:34Yeah.
13:36One step.
13:43One step.
13:44One step.
13:44One step.
13:44One step.
13:45Up.
13:46Up.
13:46Day four, our team decided to search east in some areas there that had a lot of remaining
13:53grids left.
13:57We were just about to turn around when Dad called over and said that he'd found a bottle.
14:05What sort of bottle is it?
14:06It's a long bath.
14:08I don't know.
14:09It's a really long bottle.
14:11Interesting.
14:13There's trash there too.
14:17When he said he'd found a bottle, my initial skeptical mind was that this probably isn't
14:23related.
14:25We just find the bitter of water under a tree.
14:30Empty.
14:30Empty.
14:30Does it look like anything that Sarain could have had?
14:33Anything's possible.
14:34Somebody's certainly been here and these items are somewhat odd.
14:38It's the same color as the GSM.
14:42It was only about 350 meters away from where we found the phone.
14:47That glass bottle was significant because it had a use by date in mid 2024, which meant
14:56that this particular bottle was distributed in 2023.
15:00Now, it could have come from anywhere, but it happens to also be the same brand of bottle
15:07that was being sold in the restaurant where Selene worked for a short time in Coles Bay.
15:13Well, I hope they'll be able to find if it's good for her or not.
15:18I hope that it'll be good.
15:20The bottle and the plastic bag hinted there was a very high chance Selene survived that
15:25night and had all day too to continue on lost in the forest, which is something that nobody expected.
15:32There's like some big cutout here I think you guys should come and have a look at.
15:35We're pretty close to the water race.
15:37Oh, it's a water race.
15:41So we can see that the glass bottle was located less than 100 meters away from the water race.
15:49That water race would have got her out of there.
15:51It's a man-made cutout, a walking trail.
15:54It would have been at first light. She had enough light to see where she was going,
15:59but not enough to distinguish it that's the track.
16:04And there's a pretty high chance that Selene walked straight over it and then down into the Arthur River.
16:11This zone, this zone-ci jusqu'au ruisseau, it would have to be a ratissier.
16:15Yeah.
16:15And then down into the water race.
16:22Just everyone be super safe coming up please.
16:27We'll pick up where we left off tomorrow.
16:31Fingers crossed tomorrow we could gain full closure.
16:35It's been a big week but, yeah, wouldn't want to be anywhere else I don't think.
16:46On day five we were physically exhausted, but we still pushed on through some really difficult terrain.
16:54We are the feeling, we are so close and we don't find anything anymore.
17:00So, make a sign Selene.
17:06Today is the final day, we suspended the search.
17:10We were unsuccessful, we didn't find Selene's remains.
17:15We just covered so much ground, over 40 hectares I believe.
17:20So, yeah, we're all disappointed.
17:22Best wishes, you know.
17:23Yes.
17:24I don't want to give up because we've just put so much effort into this.
17:30And we know that she's got to be there somewhere, but at what point do you stop?
17:35And that's a really tough question.
17:39We wanted to say thank you for everything because without you nothing would have been possible.
17:47Maybe we will see each other next time because if it's not finished, we'll come back.
17:55We'll come back.
18:09We'll come back.
18:12No, not for me, not for Gabriel, not for most of the volunteers.
18:16There's no reason to think, oh, the search is over.
18:18It's like, no, it's not.
18:19After we concluded the official search, given the motivation of some of these people, particularly the locals who were living
18:27in that area, they were relentless.
18:29They wanted to keep going.
18:30You've got this big unsearched spot directly in the trajectory.
18:34Yeah.
18:35I think she's in there.
18:36It's like a puzzle all coming together.
18:37Yes.
18:38Yeah.
18:38In the dark as it is, it'd be easy to go over the river race.
18:42Yeah, I think you're right.
18:42I think you get, you stop, you get cold.
18:45Yeah.
18:45I can tell the volunteers are really motivated.
18:49There is a WhatsApp group and they're talking every day.
18:53You might be over here.
18:54Many people have been searching.
19:02I was doing a solo trip that morning.
19:05I was the only one from the group available.
19:09We thought about the possibility of where she would have been going if that was her bottle.
19:16We speculated that if she had spent the night under this big fallen tree and she had survived through the
19:23night,
19:23then the next day she may have come directly across the Arthur River.
19:32If I were in her shoes, I would have made the decision to follow that large water source downstream,
19:40hoping to eventually find a road from which I could make my way back to civilization.
19:48And I believe that she was likely to have done that.
19:59I was just walking and I stopped for a moment and I just looked down and about a metre in
20:05front of my feet was what was clear to me,
20:10a human jawbone with several teeth.
20:16The shock hit me straight away.
20:19I didn't want to interfere with the scene, so I took as many photos as I could.
20:26I sent through the GPS coordinates, the track log and from there on it was left in the capable hands
20:35of police.
20:39The pathologist was able to look at the bones and say from the picture, yes, they are human remains.
20:45Clearly we thought it was likely that the remains were going to be saline.
20:50We couldn't confirm it until that forensic testing.
20:52I understood that the DNA result will be necessary, but nobody else had disappeared in this area.
21:08So I was quite sure that it was my daughter.
21:18In breaking news, Tasmania police say a bushwalker has located what are believed to be human remains near the Philosopher
21:27Falls area.
21:28When Gerard found the first few bones, I kind of refused to believe it was saline.
21:38I was expecting it, but like between assuming and knowing it, there is a huge difference and it's still been
21:47hard to process and still is.
21:52This is the area where the remains were found, about three kilometres north-east of the car park.
22:03We sent our search and rescue people back into an area of about 350 metres upstream and downstream of where
22:10Gerard originally found the first lot of remains.
22:15And as a result of that search, they did find some other remains and some clothing.
22:19And we did find a car key.
22:24We were able to test it in Saline's car, which is still in our police compound.
22:28Just to unlock the door and to see it move so freely in the ignition, it was, yeah, still waiting
22:33for the confirmation.
22:34But that was the moment I thought, yeah.
22:41Police say they've provisionally identified remains found in the state's north-west as belonging to missing backpacker Saline Cremere.
22:50The coroner is the authority to make the determinations on what happened.
22:54But we were working on a theory that the phone was lost.
22:58And then from there, with no real way to navigate, she tried to move towards the river.
23:07I believe that it's possible that Saline could have walked a couple of kilometres down that Arthur River, possibly looking
23:14for a crossing point.
23:16And when she's crossed over, that's potentially when she's had an accident.
23:22In my opinion, I think that she slipped.
23:25She's ended up in the river and she's, yeah, caught under a log jam there.
23:32And if she was in that water under one of those log jams, then that would explain why she was
23:39not located at that time.
23:42We know at the time that Saline went missing.
23:44It was the middle of winter.
23:45The Arthur River was a lot higher than it is now.
23:48The bones that Jarrod found were kind of on a dry riverbed, which would normally be underwater.
23:53So the fact that, you know, the searching was done in summer versus winter probably contributed in these discoveries.
24:03She just lost every coin flip, you know.
24:06That's how I see it.
24:08Turning off the track, losing the phone, walking over the water race.
24:13There were just so many unfortunate events that happened one after another that led to this tragedy.
24:20At the base, it was a trip that had to take more or less an hour, an hour and a
24:25half.
24:26And it wasn't supposed to be dangerous.
24:29But it didn't take any risk voluntarily.
24:31And that, for me, it's important to tell you.
24:35What happened to her, it can happen to anyone.
24:39I think it's important that her history is known,
24:43to also prevent it from other people.
24:48It's really important we try to continue to share that message that people need to be prepared.
24:52They need to stay on the form tracks.
24:54They need to tell people where they are.
24:55They need to make sure they've got, you know, appropriate communication equipment.
25:00You can't underestimate the Tassie wilderness or the weather conditions.
25:08Before all of this, it was just wondering, are we gonna go our whole lives, like, never knowing where she
25:17is?
25:17Is she still alive?
25:19Can we be doing anything to find her?
25:22So it is a relief to begin grieving after all these years.
25:31And I can't imagine how her family feels, you know.
25:36They can finally grieve, have a funeral for her.
25:48The coroner have to write her report, and then the procedure will be initiated for repatriation, maybe at mid-April.
26:04When she's arrived in Belgium, we planned two ashes scattering, what's that?
26:12In the place where her father and her grandparents rest with very close family.
26:22Finally, finally, she will be at home.
26:28We can stop always thinking, okay, what's happened next?
26:33Maybe one day I will find her, or maybe never.
26:36Now we have closure.
26:38It is the end of a nightmare.
26:45I don't have a word enough bigger to express my thankfulness.
26:53We are very, very grateful for the involvement and the bravery to do these searches.
27:03I never had thought before that such a lot of people in various parts of the world would have wanted
27:17and would have been able to help us like they have done.
27:26They have brought me confidence in humanity.
27:39The way in which the community has come together and solved a case collectively with the police, with the SES,
27:48with private volunteers, it was just incredible.
27:53These were selfless individuals who did this for no other reason than to try to get closure for someone they
28:00didn't know.
28:04The best thing to come from this was seeing everybody band together and provide that closure for a grieving family
28:11on the other side of the world.
28:14It's a team effort, but at the core of that effort is all thanks to Justine.
28:22She never gave up.
28:24We all have her to thank for that.
28:34I've got a lot of answers now.
28:37I will still have a few questions and I'm not expecting to ever find her an answer to those.
28:46But I can finally start grieving.
28:53She definitely leaves a big part of my heart empty.
29:00No one can replace her and I also don't really want to replace her.
29:06I got the heart stone carrying Celine's memory for me.
29:12I got it back in Belgium very recently after she went missing.
29:16It's always with me.
29:19I continue to remember Celine by trying to achieve the goals we had together.
29:24And yeah, I try to live my life to the fullest, enjoying and embracing every nice moment I can live.
29:40I have an emotional feeling of having participated in research.
29:47It changed my life.
29:50It changed my life.
29:52I was a very pessimist.
29:58Now that I know how much life is fragile, I look forward to trying to arrange things.
30:05Yeah, you were sure you had to look at the river from the beginning.
30:11She was living the moment.
30:14All the time.
30:16If you are going somewhere with Celine, you will drink something good.
30:21You will see the sunset.
30:23You will enjoy.
30:26And she was right.
30:28Because if we have to be deprived of living, because it's going to happen something, we don't live anymore.
30:39I want people to remember my sister about her dreams.
30:43She lives for her dreams.
30:46And I think a lot of people don't do that.
30:57I will spend the rest of my life with this sadness.
31:02But I'm not in anger.
31:09I was very proud because she goes to the other side of the world and fell in love with Tasmania.
31:22She was enjoying her life.
31:25She was happy.
31:27I'm happy.
31:28I am happy.
31:43I am happy.
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