The Herald (South Africa)

Five die in Melbourne plane crash

Beechcraft hits shopping centre after takeoff

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ALIGHT aircraft smashed into a shopping centre and exploded into a massive fireball, killing all five on board, including four American passengers – reportedly golfers on the trip of a lifetime, officials in Australia said yesterday.

The twin-engined Beechcraft plane veered just after takeoff into a shopping centre, which was still closed, next to Essendon Fields airport near Melbourne.

“Five on the aircraft and looks like no one has survived,” Victoria Police Assistant Commission­er Stephen Leane said.

Premier Daniel Andrews described it as “the worst civil aviation accident that our state has seen for 30 years”.

The private charter from Essendon, north of Melbourne, to King Island, 55 minutes to the south, came down just short of a major motorway packed with the heavy traffic of early-morning commuters.

Live TV footage showed burnt-out wreckage, flames and major damage at the shopping centre and adjacent buildings.

A column of thick black smoke rose into the air as witnesses spoke of the explosion.

“The pilot unfortunat­ely attempted to return to Essendon but has crashed into the DFO (Direct Factory Outlet) at Essendon Fields,” Leane said.

The centre was not due to open for another hour and no one inside was hurt.

A taxi driver called ABC radio and told of the massive fireball and a landing wheel bouncing onto the motorway.

“I could feel the heat through the window of the taxi, and then a wheel – it looked like a plane wheel – bounced on the road and hit the front of the taxi as we were driving along,” he said.

Victoria Police Superinten­dent Mick Frewen said investigat­ions centred on a catastroph­ic engine failure.

The highly experience­d 60year-old Australian pilot made a Mayday call before crashing.

A shopworker called Ash told Sky News he saw “the fireball go up into the air”, adding it “felt like a bomb had gone off”.

“The fire was just so hot we could not get anywhere near it,” he said. “We could see the wreckage, or what was left of it.”

The US embassy in Canberra said the four passengers were American citizens. “We extend our deepest condolence­s to the families and loved ones of those who died,” a spokeswoma­n said.

Melbourne’s Herald Sun identified two of the dead as Greg de Haven, 70, a retired FBI agent, and lawyer Russell Munsch, both from Texas, who were travelling with two unnamed friends.

Melbourne fire brigade chief Paul Stacchino said more than 60 firefighte­rs had worked hard to bring the fire under control. Crews remained on scene. Essendon Fields was closed and all traffic diverted to Melbourne’s two larger airports, Tullamarin­e and Avalon.

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? TRAGIC ACCIDENT: Smoke and flames billow at the site of the crash in Melbourne
Picture: AFP TRAGIC ACCIDENT: Smoke and flames billow at the site of the crash in Melbourne

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