
Tasmanian police have re-opened a large-scale ground search for Belgian tourist Celine Cremer after a volunteer located her mobile phone near Philosopher Falls, close to where she was last seen in June 2023. Officers will now join private investigators and local volunteers combing steep rainforest terrain that had previously been “extensively searched”, according to Inspector Andrew Hanson.
Cremer’s disappearance drew international attention and raised questions about back-country safety for overseas visitors. Despite two years without substantive leads, her family in Liège funded a renewed search this weekend with advanced drone imaging and canine units specialising in decomposed-scent tracking. The discovery of the Samsung handset—intact but weather-damaged—has given authorities fresh GPS metadata to narrow the search grid.
For Belgians planning similar journeys, ensuring that documentation is in order is a first layer of safety. VisaHQ, an online visa and passport service, guides Belgian citizens through the application requirements for Australia and more than 200 other destinations, with real-time updates on processing times and consular advisories. Travellers can start the process or browse country-specific information at https://www.visahq.com/belgium/.
Australia attracts more than 20,000 Belgian tourists annually, many of whom trek in remote national parks. Belgian consular officials in Sydney say they are updating travel-safety advisories to emphasise satellite beacons and route-registration apps for solo hikers.
While the case does not involve visa complications, it underscores the duty-of-care obligations that Belgian employers and study-abroad organisers owe to staff and students undertaking independent travel in Australasia. Risk-management firms recommend mandatory wilderness-first-aid briefings and real-time location-sharing protocols for corporate travellers venturing beyond metropolitan centres.
Police will evaluate search results over the coming week before deciding whether to continue. Cremer’s family has thanked donors and volunteers, reiterating hope for closure.
Cremer’s disappearance drew international attention and raised questions about back-country safety for overseas visitors. Despite two years without substantive leads, her family in Liège funded a renewed search this weekend with advanced drone imaging and canine units specialising in decomposed-scent tracking. The discovery of the Samsung handset—intact but weather-damaged—has given authorities fresh GPS metadata to narrow the search grid.
For Belgians planning similar journeys, ensuring that documentation is in order is a first layer of safety. VisaHQ, an online visa and passport service, guides Belgian citizens through the application requirements for Australia and more than 200 other destinations, with real-time updates on processing times and consular advisories. Travellers can start the process or browse country-specific information at https://www.visahq.com/belgium/.
Australia attracts more than 20,000 Belgian tourists annually, many of whom trek in remote national parks. Belgian consular officials in Sydney say they are updating travel-safety advisories to emphasise satellite beacons and route-registration apps for solo hikers.
While the case does not involve visa complications, it underscores the duty-of-care obligations that Belgian employers and study-abroad organisers owe to staff and students undertaking independent travel in Australasia. Risk-management firms recommend mandatory wilderness-first-aid briefings and real-time location-sharing protocols for corporate travellers venturing beyond metropolitan centres.
Police will evaluate search results over the coming week before deciding whether to continue. Cremer’s family has thanked donors and volunteers, reiterating hope for closure.





