3 U.S. Firefighters Are Killed as Air Tanker Crashes in Australia
SYDNEY, Australia
 — Three firefighters from the United States were killed on Thursday as a
 large aircraft being used to battle bush fires crashed south of the 
Australian capital, Canberra, the Rural Fire Service in New South Wales 
said.
The cause of the disaster was 
not immediately known. The plane went down on Thursday afternoon as 
blazes were threatening parts of New South Wales, ending a brief lull in
 the country’s summer of disastrous wildfires.
The
 aircraft, a C-130 Hercules carrying a load of fire retardant, was 
operated by Coulson Aviation, a Canadian company that helped battle last
 year’s California fires and has long worked in Australia.
The
 plane crashed in the Snowy Mountains of New South Wales, about 70 miles
 south of Canberra, according to the Rural Fire Service. The Australian 
Transport Safety Bureau and the police were investigating the crash, an 
inquiry that could be affected by active fires in the aera.
Shane Fitzsimmons, the Rural Fire Service
 commissioner, said those on board the plane were experienced and well 
known to their Australian and American colleagues. The victims were not 
immediately identified.
“Our hearts 
are with all those that are suffering in what is the loss of three 
remarkable, well-respected crew that have invested so many decades of 
their life into firefighting,” he said at a news conference. 
 As the blazes have intensified, American firefighters have arrived to 
help, extending a history of firefighting collaboration between the two 
countries that goes back almost two decades. 
Since December, about 200 American fire 
personnel have been deployed to Australia, the center said. Those 
firefighters have largely gone to New South Wales and Victoria, where 
the crisis has been centered. They fill a variety of roles, including 
managing aircraft and supervising firelines. 
Australians have expressed wide gratitude for the assistance; American firefighters arriving at Sydney’s airport this month were welcomed with applause. 
The United States and Australia also share aircraft, leasing planes at different times of the year. That arrangement has grown more difficult to maintain as fire seasons in the two hemispheres lengthen and overlap.
More than 70 firefighting aircraft were being used in New South Wales on Thursday, Ms. Berejiklian said.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/23/world/australia/plane-crash-fires.html

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