By Agence France-Presse
Nine Australian NBA stars have partnered with the league and the National Basketball Players Association Foundation to donate $750,000 towards relief and recovery efforts for Australia's bushfire disaster, the NBA said Tuesday.
This combination of file pictures created on January 7, 2020 shows Australian NBA stars who have partnered with the league and the National Basketball Players Association Foundation to donate $750,000 towards relief and recovery efforts for Australia's bushfire disaster, the NBA said on January 7, 2020. (Photos by GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / AFP)
"We are heartbroken over the devastation these fires are causing all across our homeland," the players said in a joint statement.
"Our thoughts are with our families, friends and all of the people of Australia. We hope you feel our love and support and know that we will continue to bring awareness to this crisis globally and provide assistance in any way we can."
This handout photo taken on January 6, 2020 and received on January 7 from the Australian Department of Defence shows a fire in the distance seen from the Royal Australian Navy's HMAS Adelaide ship off the coast in Eden in New South Wales, as part of bushfire relief operations. (Photo by Handout / AUSTRALIAN DEPARTMENT OF DEFENCE / AFP)
The players contributing to the fund include Philadelphia 76ers duo Ben Simmons and Jonah Bolden and Phoenix Suns ace Aron Baynes.
San Antonio's Patty Mills, Ryan Broekhoff (Dallas Mavericks), Matthew Dellavedova and Dante Exum (Cleveland Cavaliers), Joe Ingles (Utah Jazz) and Thon Maker (Detroit Pistons) also contributed.
A statement said the funds would help aid immediate relief efforts as well as long-term rebuilding projects.
"Our players have a deep connection to the places where they grew up and have always responded with generosity and compassion in the aftermath of disasters," NBPA Foundation executive director Sherrie Deans said.
"The Foundation's board is committed to extending our long-standing support of players' financial contributions in response to disasters through this joint effort."
Twenty-five people have died since the start of the disaster in September, more than 1,800 homes have been destroyed, and some eight million hectares (80,000 square kilometers) has burned, an area the size of Ireland or South Carolina.
Smoke from the giant infernos has been spotted more than 12,000 kilometers (7,400 miles) away in Chile and Argentina, weather authorities in the South American countries have said.