Dingoes Hurt People at a Park Campground
Introduction
A dingo is a wild dog. In April 2025, dingoes hurt three children and one adult at a campground in Karijini National Park, Western Australia. Park workers now watch the dingoes more.
Main Body
The problems happened from Saturday to Wednesday. On Saturday morning, a dingo came near a 6-year-old girl. It bit her clothes. She was not hurt. On Monday evening, a dingo bit a 6-year-old boy on his neck and arm. His parents took him to the hospital. On Wednesday evening, a dingo bit a 4-year-old girl on her leg. Her mother tried to help. The dingo bit her hand. Both got first aid and then went to the hospital. Other reports say more children had small bites. All injuries were small. No one was very hurt. Park workers now patrol the campground at night. They want to find and kill the dangerous dingoes. They brought more workers from Perth. Some people say the campground closed. Other people say it is still open with more signs and warnings. The park says dingoes are part of nature but people must be safe. They tell campers to keep food and rubbish safe, watch children, and tell workers about bad dingoes.
Conclusion
The park is still watching the dingoes. People who visit should follow safety rules. Do not feed the dingoes. Stay far away from them. More dingoes may come.