The U.S. military and police are searching for a soldier's daughter who mysteriously vanished from Camp Humphreys near Seoul, South Korea last week.

According to the U.S. Army Garrison Humphreys Facebook page, 17-year-old Fatima Andrea Wdave went missing the night of August 10.

She was last seen standing outside of her quarters on post around 10.30pm.

Wdave is 5ft, 3 inches tall, weighing 140 pounds and she has black hair and black eyes.

'The goal of all of this is to locate her and get her home safely with her family,' Bob McElroy, a spokesperson for Garrison, said in a statement Friday.

The U.S. military has put out an all-points bulletin for an American soldier's teenage daughter who went missing from Camp Humphreys, south of Seoul, about a week ago

Fatima Andrea Wdave, 17, was last seen outside of her on-post quarters at about 10.30pm on August 10

Wdave is 5ft, 3 inches tall and weighs 140 pounds. She has black hair and black eyes

Korean police are also aiding in the search for the missing teen.

The Provost Marshall's Office is asking for any information on the whereabouts of Wdave to call one of the phone numbers listed in the release.

Camp Humphreys is located just 55 miles south of the nation's capital, Seoul, and neighbors the town of Anjung-Ri.

The base currently holds about 28,500 U.S. troops with the remainder of its population being other 'soldiers, civilians, family members and contractors,' according to a recent report by Military Installations.

Spokesperson for Garrison Bob McElroy said the goal is to 'locate her and get her home safely with her family'

U.S troops currently account for about 28,500 of Camp Humphrey's population, with the rest being other 'soldiers, civilians, family members and contractors'

The population has continued to skyrocket in recent years since the transformation of the installation.

'It is, essentially, building a compound the size of (downtown) Washington, D.C.,' Maj. Gen. James T. Walton, U.S. Forces Korea's director for Transformation and Restationing, said in a statement.

When speaking of the progress, United States Forces Korea commander Gen. Curtis M. Scaparrotti said on its website that 'over 10,000 workers are constructing headquarters, barracks, family housing and an assortment of other key facilities for our mission and life support.'

The construction is to ensure they are 'carefully planning the transition capability from Yongsan to Humphreys to support the growing population down there,' Walton added.