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Prominent British CEO and family killed in Australian seaplane crash

One pilot and five passengers died following the crash yesterday.

SEAPLANE CRASH RECOVERY SYDNEY The body of a passenger aboard a seaplane that crashed into the Hawkesbury River is brought ashore along with debris of the wreck at Apple Tree Bay, Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park in NSW, Australia. Perry Duffin / AAP/PA Images Perry Duffin / AAP/PA Images / AAP/PA Images

A HIGH-PROFILE British CEO and his family were among six people killed in a New Year’s Eve seaplane crash in Australia, police have confirmed.

The plane went down yesterday in the Hawkesbury River near the suburb of Cowan some 50 kilometres north of Sydney, as New Year’s revellers on the banks watched in shock.

The bodies of all of those on board – one pilot and five passengers – have been recovered from the wreckage, with Richard Cousins, chief executive of British catering giant Compass, identified as among the deceased.

Cousins’ two sons in their early 20s and his fiancee and her 11-year-old daughter were also killed in the crash.

“The thoughts of everyone at Compass are with Richard’s family and friends, and we extend our deepest sympathies with them,” Compass group chairman Paul Walsh said in a statement.

Cousins, who was recently named by Harvard Business Review as one of the world’s best-performing CEOs, was due to step down from Compass this year.

New South Wales detective superintendent Mark Hutchings said all passengers on board were British nationals and the pilot Australian.

The cause of the accident remains unknown with the investigation ongoing.

Witnesses recalled seeing the aircraft, a DHC-2 Beaver Seaplane which was heading to Rose Bay in Sydney Harbour, do a sharp turn before plummeting straight into the water.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, whose father died in a light plane accident, paid his respects to the families of those killed.

“We grieve for those who’ve lost their lives, and again, our thoughts and prayers are with their families as they come to terms with this terrible loss,” he said.

The flight company Sydney Seaplanes has suspended its operations until further notice.

© – AFP 2018

Read: Six bodies recovered after Sydney seaplane crash

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    Mute Gillian Weir Scully
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    Jan 1st 2018, 8:06 AM

    So sad.

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    Mute John Rag Scales
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    Jan 1st 2018, 9:41 AM

    Very sad rip

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    Mute Deborah Behan
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    Jan 1st 2018, 11:55 AM

    Poor family I hope they didn’t suffer. RIP.

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Jan 1st 2018, 3:05 PM

    @Deborah Behan: I’d call sudden death a bit of a pain in the neck myself. I can understand responsible parents taking separate flights, although I wouldn’t think twice about getting on a commercial flight – but I honestly don’t think a child should be in a small hobby plane unless it’s an emergency situation, such as fire evacuation. RIP to all.

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Jan 1st 2018, 4:20 PM

    @Fiona Fitzgerald: I don’t think that it was a small hobby plane, more like a commercial seaplane used by sightseeing tourists over Sydney Harbour environs. The pilot also lost his life had over 10,000 flying hours to his credit. Investigators will have to raise tthe plane from the river bed before carrying out checks to find out the cause of the crash. Eyewitnesses said that the plane went into a steep nose dive after making a sharp turn.

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    Mute Hey There Lovely!
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    Jan 1st 2018, 10:23 AM

    What’s a ceo?

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    Mute Abe Brennan
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    Jan 1st 2018, 10:34 AM

    @Hey There Lovely!: chief executive officer.

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    Mute Hey There Lovely!
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    Jan 1st 2018, 11:34 AM

    @Abe Brennan: OIC.

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    Mute Deborah Behan
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    Jan 1st 2018, 11:54 AM

    @Hey There Lovely!: oh god did you ask that question just so you could do that joke? Lol!

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    Mute Thosj Carroll
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    Jan 1st 2018, 1:58 PM

    Family almost wiped off…..how could it happen and why they must die? RIP

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