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Five Die as Plane Crashes Into Mall in Australia

The plane suffered engine failure and crashed into a mall near the end of the runway. There were no fatalities other than those aboard the aircraft.
Tom Westbrook
Feb 21 2017
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The plane suffered engine failure and crashed into a mall near the end of the runway. There were no fatalities other than those aboard the aircraft.
Emergency services personnel are seen at the scene of a plane crash in Essendon in Melbourne, Australia, February 21, 2017. Credit: Joe Castro/Reuters
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Emergency services personnel are seen at the scene of a plane crash in Essendon in Melbourne, Australia, February 21, 2017. Credit: Joe Castro/Reuters

Sydney: Five people were killed on Tuesday when a plane crashed into the roof of a mall after taking off from an airfield outside Melbourne, Australia's second-largest city, police said.

The twin-turboprop Beechcraft King Air plane suffered engine failure and crashed into the mall near the end of the runway at Essendon Airport, Victoria state police assistant commissioner Stephen Leane told reporters in Melbourne.

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Witnesses told Australian Associated Press the plane exploded on impact.

"There were five people on the aeroplane and it looks like nobody's survived the crash," Leane said.

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The crash happened at around 9 am, about an hour before the mall was due to open and there were no fatalities other than those aboard the aircraft, he added.

Sky News showed burning wreckage strewn across the mall's carpark and a thick column of black smoke rising from the crash site.

Police did not release information about the identity of the casualties.

The plane had been bound for King Island in Bass Strait between the mainland and the southern island state of Tasmania.

A spokeswoman for Airservices Australia said flights in and out of Melbourne's main airport were unaffected. Essendon Airport, which is used mainly by light aircraft, remained closed.

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau will investigate the crash.

(Reuters)

This article went live on February twenty-first, two thousand seventeen, at forty-six minutes past eleven in the morning.

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