San Diego Union-Tribune

5 CHILDREN KILLED AFTER BOUNCY CASTLE FLIES OFF

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Thursday was meant to be a day of celebratio­n for the children of Hillcrest Primary School in the Australian island state of Tasmania.

Instead, the final day of the school year was marred by tragedy: Five children were killed and at least four others were seriously injured when a bouncy castle was blown into the air by strong winds. As the castle took flight, with the students and a number of inflatable plastic balls inside, nine children tumbled more than 30 feet to the ground below, Tasmanian police said.

Four of the dead — two boys and two girls — were sixth-graders. They had been due to begin high school in the new year. (Australian schools follow the calendar year.)

“On a day when these children were meant to be celebratin­g ... we’re all mourning their loss,” Tasmanian Police Commission­er Darren Hine told reporters. “Our hearts are breaking for the families and the loved ones, schoolmate­s, teachers of these young people who were taken too soon.”

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear whether the castle was tied down at the time of the incident, or how many children were on the castle when it took off. An investigat­ion is under way.

Pictures posted on social media by an Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp. reporter showed part of the deflated castle dangling from a nearby tree. A blue plastic tarpaulin cordoned off an area where the children were likely to have landed. In another photo, two police officers huddled on the grass in front of a deserted playground, comforting each other.

“This is a very tragic event and our thoughts are with the families and the wider school community, and also our first responders,” Commander Debbie Williams told reporters. “There is no doubt that this has been a very confrontin­g and distressin­g scene.”

Parents rushed to the school, uncertain whether their children were among the injured, the ABC reported. In a statement posted on Facebook, the school asked parents to collect their children “as a matter of urgency” and said it would close for the rest of the day.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the Tasmanian incident was “unthinkabl­y heartbreak­ing.”

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