An Oxford backpacker is fighting for her life in hospital
 after plunging 65 feet in the Australian rainforest. Queensland
 Police are investigating the accident.  Lucy Keen, 24, was visiting Cape Tribulation in Queensland
 when she fell from a viewing platform. She had been about to
 embark on the Flying Fox ride when the accident happened. The
 ride involves people being attached to a harness and then gliding
 across a rope connected between two points in the forest,
 enabling people to ‘jungle surf ’. Queensland police
 said that Keen’s condition was “very serious.”
 “If she does survive,” said Dt Sgt Trevor Perham,
 “we don’t know what lasting injuries she will
 incur.”  The Flying Fox ride, which was launched last August, had a
 100% safety record until the accident on Saturday. Keith Chegwin
 and his television crew are among the many British tourists who
 have taken advantage of the opportunity to see the rainforest at
 such close quarters. The Jungle Surfing Canopy Tours is run by a
 group of biological scientists who use the ride to look at the
 flora and fauna of the forest. They charge £27 an hour for the
 experience, promising tourists they can “feel like Tarzan or
 Jane.”  Keen has broken her pelvis and all her ribs in the fall and
 remains unconscious in hospital. Her parents have flown from
 their home in Oxfordshire to Australia to be at their
 daughter’s bedside. Keen was brought up in Oxford and
 studied at universities in Leicester and Cardiff.ARCHIVE: 5th week TT 2004 

