Light plane with 5 aboard crashes into Australia shops

TO GO WITH STORY BY ALI KHALIL  An airport employee signals to a twin-propeller Beechcraft plane that is fixed with salt flares which are fired into a promising cloud to increase condensation and hopefully trigger rainfall, as it prepares to take off on a cloud-seeding mission at al-Ain airport on April 23, 2015.  Being one of the most arid countries in the world, the United Arab Emirates is striving to capture every droplet by inducing clouds to produce rain and meet its ever-increasing water needs. AFP PHOTO / MARWAN NAAMANI / AFP PHOTO / MARWAN NAAMANI

An airport employee signals to a twin-propeller Beechcraft plane at al-Ain airport on April 23, 2015. A similar Beechcraft plane crashed in Australia with five people on board. AFP FILE

MELBOURNE, Australia — A light aircraft carrying five people crashed Tuesday in a “massive fireball”, hitting a shopping center near the Australian city of Melbourne and sending black smoke billowing into the air, witnesses and officials said.

The Beechcraft plane veered just after take-off into the shopping center, that had yet to open, next to Essendon airport.

“It’s too early to know whether there has been fatalities,” Victoria state police minister Lisa Neville told reporters.

“But it appears to be a very, very tragic accident that has occurred out there.”

She could not provide any casualty figures but confirmed five people were on board the private charter from Essendon, north of Melbourne, to King Island, 55 minutes to the south.

Live television footage showed burnout 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 explosions.

“It appears a light plane, which is a charter flight, has impacted the DFO (Direct Factory Outlet) at Essendon Fields,” Neville added.

A taxi driver called ABC radio and told of a “massive fireball”.

“I saw this plane … when it hit the building there was a massive fireball,” said the man who identified himself as Jason.

“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.”

Victoria police superintendent Mick Frewen said investigations centred on a “catastrophic engine failure”.

The flight made a May-Day call before crashing, he added.

A major freeway which runs alongside the local airport to was shut to allow wreckage to be cleared. CBB

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