Australia names 3 US firefighters who died battling bushfires

The bodies of the three men who died in a plane crash earlier this week in Australia's remote bushland while battling a fierce wildfire have also been recovered.

Australian police say they have been taken for a post mortem examination to confirm their identities.

The Canadian firm that employed the trio, named them as U.S. military veterans Captain Ian H. McBeth, First Officer Paul Clyde Hudson, and Flight Engineer Rick DeMorgan Jr. 

The crash of the C-130 tanker plane has contributed further to national grief in Australia over bushfires that have killed 33 people since October. 

Officials said it was too early to speculate on the cause of the crash of the plane that went down just after it dumped a large load of chemicals on a huge wildfire in a national park in the mountains south of Canberra, the Australian capital.

The Americans were a part of a multi-national force helping Australia to combat the ferocious bushfires. 
 

More from International News

  • US Gaza aid pier breaks in heavy seas

    A US military-built pier off Gaza's coast is being temporarily removed after a part of the structure broke off, the Pentagon said, in the latest blow to efforts to deliver humanitarian aid to Palestinians.

  • South Korea accuses North of sending 'trash' balloons

    South Korea has accused North Korea of sending a large number of balloons across the heavily fortified border between the countries to drop objects that included trash and excrement, calling the act base and dangerous.

  • US says latest Rafah deaths won't change Israel policy

    The Biden administration said on Tuesday it was closely monitoring the probe into a deadly Israeli airstrike it called "tragic", but that the recent deaths in Rafah didn't constitute a major ground operation there that crosses any US red lines.

  • Israeli forces press Rafah offensive despite global outcry

    Israel pounded Rafah with airstrikes and tank fire on Tuesday, pressing its offensive in Gaza's southern city despite international condemnation of an attack that sparked a blaze in a tent camp for the displaced, killing at least 45 people.

Blogs