
Grief, angst continues as toll in jet crash on school rises to 32 in Bangladesh
The F-7 BGI aircraft, a training fighter jet manufactured in China, experienced a 'mechanical fault" moments after takeoff and crashed into a two-storey building of Milestone School and College in Dhaka's Uttara area on Monday.
Thousands of students on Tuesday protested in Dhaka demanding 'accurate" information on casualties and compensation for the families of those killed in the Bangladesh Air Force training jet crash into the school.
On Wednesday, as scores of others with burn wounds continued fighting for lives at different hospitals in the capital, authorities of the Milestone School, on which the jet had crashed, formed their own committee to ascertain the accurate death toll and number of their wounded students and teachers.
Doctors said a nine-year-old boy, identified only as Nafi, succumbed to his wounds overnight at the National Institute of Burn and Plastic Surgery (NIBPS) raising the toll to 32 in the crash.
'He survived for two days sustaining 95 per cent burns and breathed his last shortly after midnight," NIBPS surgeon Shawon Bin Rahman told reporters.
Several more people who received severe critical burn wounds are being treated at the hospital, he said.
According to media reports at least 69 people, mostly underage and teenage children, are receiving treatment at different government and private health facilities, including at Dhaka's combined military hospital (CMH).
Meanwhile, after daylong student protests on Tuesday where they claimed the interim government of Muhammad Yunus was concealing the actual casualty figures, Milestone School authorities on Wednesday formed a committee to find the accurate death toll and number of their wounded students and teachers.
'Many students, teachers, staff, and guardians were affected by the incident. Many were injured and some lost their lives. The committee is formed in order to determine the actual number of dead, injured, and missing, and to prepare a list with their names and addresses," the school said in a notice.
Principal Mohammad Ziaul Alam is to chair the committee, which, the school said, would submit its report in the next three days.
The Bangladesh Air Force has already formed a high-level investigation committee to determine the cause of the accident.
Earlier on Tuesday, hundreds of students of the Milestone School and College, as well as from nearby schools, protested, demanding the 'accurate" disclosure of the information about those killed, compensation for victims' families and the immediate discontinuation of outdated and unsafe training aircraft used by the Bangladesh Air Force.
The crash was one of the deadliest in Bangladesh's history.
In the last such aviation tragedy in 1984, a total of 49 people were killed when a passenger jet crashed as it attempted to land during a severe rainstorm at the Dhaka airport. PTI AR NPK NPK
view comments
First Published:
July 23, 2025, 14:30 IST
Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hindu
2 hours ago
- The Hindu
British fighter jet makes emergency landing in Japan
A British F-35 stealth fighter jet made an emergency landing on Sunday (August 10, 2025) at the Kagoshima airport located in south-western Japan due to a malfunction, airport officials said, as reported by Kyodo News. According to Kyodo News, some departures and arrivals of commercial flights at the airport were affected when a runway was closed for approximately 20 minutes following the incident, which occurred at around 11:30 a.m., as officials stated. No injuries were reported. Kyodo News noted that British forces have been conducting a joint drill with Japan's Maritime Self-Defence Force and American forces since August 4, which will continue through next Tuesday (August 19, 2025), having dispatched an aircraft carrier strike group to the western Pacific. Earlier in July, a British F-35B fighter jet left India after making an emergency landing in Kerala's capital city of Thiruvananthapuram due to a hydraulic system fault. The fighter jet had made an emergency landing at the airport on June 14. The British Navy aircraft is a part of the U.K. Navy aircraft carrier HMS Prince of Wales. The fighter jet was out on a routine sortie when it developed a snag and could not land on the ship. The plane reached the Thiruvananthapuram airport, which was designated as the emergency recovery airfield, and requested emergency landing permission. The Indian Air Force provided all required support and assisted in the process, including refuelling. The British Navy's F-35 fighter jet finally took off from Thiruvananthapuram International Airport on July 22 after remaining grounded at the airport for over a month following a fault in the hydraulic system. F-35Bs are highly advanced stealth jets, built by Lockheed Martin, and are prized for their short take-off and vertical landing capability.


United News of India
2 days ago
- United News of India
Five Pakistan fighters shot down during Operation Sindoor: IAF chief
Bengaluru, Aug 9 (UNI) The Indian Air Force destroyed at least five enemy fighter aircraft and one large airborne surveillance platform, possibly an AWNCA or LNT aircraft, during Operation Sindoor, Chief of the Air Staff, Air Chief Marshal AP Singh, said today. The Air Chief revealed that the large aircraft was taken down at a range of about 300 kilometres, the longest recorded surface-to-air kill in history. 'This is the largest ever recorded surface-to-air engagement, and it sends a powerful signal about our air defence capabilities,' Singh said. The IAF chief added that several F-16 fighter jets were confirmed to be under maintenance at the time of the strikes, in addition to other aircraft destroyed or damaged on the ground. 'We have at least five fighters confirmed killed. The large aircraft we neutralised was either an electronic intelligence platform or an airborne warning and control system,' he explained. Singh said these achievements were supported by India's advanced air defence systems, including the S-400 platform, which played a key role in detecting and neutralising enemy targets at extended ranges. According to Singh, the targeting of high-value airborne assets, combined with the elimination of multiple fighters, was aimed at crippling the adversary's operational awareness and reducing its ability to coordinate air operations effectively. Operation Sindoor was designed to send a clear message that the Indian Air Force can strike deep inside enemy territory at any time, Singh said. The Air Chief said the mission's objective was not limited to destroying a single target but aimed to stretch enemy resources and create the impression that terrorists are safe nowhere. 'That night, we held nothing back. We decided we would attack at multiple points across the front, forcing them to defend several locations simultaneously. The idea was to give them the feeling — or the indication — that we can hit them wherever we want, whenever we want,' he explained. Singh said enemy aircraft did come near the borders, and although they often stayed away, there were occasions when they were within operational range. 'That gave us opportunities to engage them,' he said, adding that the Indian offensive was planned without restrictions. Among the key strikes was the attack on the Command and Control Centre at the Noor Khan Air Base. 'This was based on specific intelligence. The main planning building, also used at times as a civil terminal, was targeted to disrupt operational planning,' he said. At Sukkur Airbase, the IAF hit the UAV hangar and a radar site, with before-and-after visuals confirming the damage. At Bulari, an AWACS hangar was destroyed, and clear evidence showed that an aircraft was inside during the strike. Recalling the strike on Sargodha, Singh said, 'We had hard intelligence of an F-16 taking off from there. It was a moment we in the Air Force have dreamt of — and I got my chance just before retirement.' The Air Chief underlined that each attack during Operation Sindoor was chosen based on precise intelligence, ensuring that critical assets — from radar installations to aircraft hangars — were neutralised, sending a strong signal about India's offensive reach and readiness. UNI BDN AAB


India Today
2 days ago
- India Today
6 Pak jets shot down during Op Sindoor: Air Force chief's big revelation
The Indian Air Force (IAF) chief, Air Chief Marshal AP Singh, on Friday said that the armed forces' surface-to-air missile systems destroyed five Pakistani fighter jets and another aircraft designed for airborne surveillance during Operation Sindoor, India's retaliatory action following the April 22 Pahalgam attacks. Speaking at the Air Chief Marshal LM Katre Lecture in Bengaluru, Singh revealed that US-made F-16 jets parked at the Jacobabad airbase were among those destroyed when India struck Pakistan's military installations on May 10. He also confirmed that several Pakistani airbases, including Jacobabad, suffered extensive damage in the strikes. "We have at least five fighters confirmed kills and one large aircraft, which could be either an ELINT aircraft or an AEW&C (Airborne Warning and Control System) aircraft, which was taken on at a distance of about 300 kilometres. This is actually the largest ever recorded surface-to-air kill that we can talk about," he said. This marks the first public acknowledgement by the armed forces of the scale of damage inflicted on Pakistan's air fleet during the operation.