The desperate search to find a Perth volunteer in the aftermath of Nepal's devastating earthquake is over after she finally touched based with her family.
Ballantyne Paige Forder made contact on Sunday to confirm her safety, saying she had been busy helping to move the children at the orphanage she was working at to safety - to a nearby field.
SHE'S SAFE!!! Moved the entire orphanage to a field where they've been camping since yesterday! So proud of my little sister!— Amanda-Sue Markham (@sue_amandasue) April 26, 2015
Her sister Amanda-Sue Markham revealed the news on Twitter, following her desperate pleas for help over the past few days.
She tweeted: "My baby sister is safe. Prayers answered as she and the orphanage moved to safety."
Fears grew over 22-year-old Ballantyne Forder, known as Billie, after the deadly 7.8 magnitude earthquake hit Nepal on Saturday morning.
And as the hours passed her family took to social media for help in tracing her.
Although contact has remained difficult and her family have limited information on her whereabouts Amanda-Sue Markham tweeted: "So proud of my little sister! We still don't know where the heck she is, but she is safe."
It was the second piece of good news for Western Australian families desperately trying to get information from loved ones stuck in the region.
Earlier on Sunday Shannen Wynne and Callumn Shelley also made contact with their families, more than 24 hours after the quake, to confirm they were alive and well.
As many as 350 Australians remain unaccounted for however, as the search continues.