logo
Teacher dies saving students from inferno in Bangladesh jet crash

Teacher dies saving students from inferno in Bangladesh jet crash

CNA3 days ago
DHAKA: When a Bangladesh Air Force fighter jet crashed into her school and erupted in a fireball on Monday (Jul 21), Maherin Chowdhury rushed to save some of the hundreds of students and teachers facing mortal danger, placing their safety before her own.
The 46-year-old English teacher went back again and again into a burning classroom to rescue her students, even as her own clothes were engulfed in flames, her brother, Munaf Mojib Chowdhury, told Reuters by telephone.
Maherin died on Monday after suffering near-total burns on her body. She is survived by her husband and two teenage sons.
"When her husband called her, pleading with her to leave the scene and think of her children, she refused, saying, 'They are also my children, they are burning. How can I leave them?'" Chowdhury said.
At least 29 people, most of them children, were killed when the F-7 BGI crashed into the school, trapping them in fire and debris. The military said the aircraft had suffered mechanical failure.
"I don't know exactly how many she saved, but it may have been at least 20. She pulled them out with her own hands," he said, adding that he found out about his sister's act of bravery when he visited the hospital and met students she had rescued.
The jet had taken off from a nearby air base on a routine training mission, the military said. After experiencing mechanical failure, the pilot tried to divert the aircraft away from populated areas, but it crashed into the campus. The pilot was among those killed.
"When the plane crashed and fire broke out, everyone was running to save their lives, she ran to save others," Khadija Akter, the headmistress of the school's primary section, told Reuters on the phone about Maherin.
She was buried on Tuesday in her home district of Nilphamari, in northern Bangladesh.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Investigators find black boxes from crashed Russia plane
Investigators find black boxes from crashed Russia plane

CNA

time12 hours ago

  • CNA

Investigators find black boxes from crashed Russia plane

MOSCOW: Investigators have recovered flight data recorders from the wreckage of a plane that crashed in Russia's far east, killing 48 people, and will send them for analysis, authorities said on Friday (Jul 25). The aircraft, an Antonov-24 operated by Angara Airlines, was making a second attempt to land in the remote Siberian town of Tynda when it disappeared from radar around 1pm local time (4am GMT) on Thursday. A rescue helicopter later spotted the burning fuselage of the plane on a forested mountain slope about 15km south of Tynda's airport. Prosecutors have not commented on what may have caused the crash, but a rescuer quoted by the TASS news agency said the twin-propeller plane - almost 50 years old - was attempting to land in thick cloud. Investigators are looking into whether the crash was caused by technical malfunction or human error, the agency reported. "The flight recorders have been found at the crash site and will be delivered to Moscow for decryption in the near future," Russia's transport ministry said in a statement. Russian authorities have also launched an investigation into the plane's operator, Angara Airlines, and whether it complied with regulations, it added. "Based on the findings, a decision will be made on the company's future operations," the ministry said. Angara Airlines, a small regional carrier based in the Siberian city of Irkutsk, said it was doing "everything possible to investigate the circumstances of the accident". The company's CEO, Sergei Salamanov, told Russia's REN TV channel on Thursday that it was the plane's captain - an experienced pilot with 11,000 hours of flight time - who decided to make the flight. "The weather forecast was unfavourable," he said. Regional investigators said on Friday they had recovered bodies from the wreckage. The plane came down in a hard-to-reach area and it took a ground rescue team hours to reach the site.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store