Death toll rises to 27 in Bangladesh air force jet crash, official says

Update Death toll rises to 27 in Bangladesh air force jet crash, official says
Rescuers look for the survivors after a Bangladesh Air Force training aircraft that crashed onto a school campus shortly after takeoff in Dhaka on July 21, 2025. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 22 July 2025

Death toll rises to 27 in Bangladesh air force jet crash, official says

Death toll rises to 27 in Bangladesh air force jet crash, official says
  • The F-7 BGI aircraft crashed soon after it took off on Monday afternoon from the air base in Kurmitola

DHAKA: At least 27 people were killed after a Bangladesh Air Force training jet crashed into a college and school campus in Dhaka, officials said on Tuesday, with 88 people, including children, being treated in hospital.

The F-7 BGI aircraft crashed soon after it took off at 1:06 p.m. (0706 GMT) on Monday from the air base in Kurmitola in the capital on a routine training mission. The military said the plane experienced a mechanical failure.

Sayedur Rahman, special assistant to the chief adviser on health, told reporters that 27 people had died and 88 were admitted to hospital with burn injuries.

The government announced a day of mourning, with flags at half-mast and special prayers at all places of worship.

The pilot was among those killed in the incident, the military said, adding that a committee had been formed to investigate what happened.

The F-7 BGI is the final and most advanced variant in China’s Chengdu J-7/F-7 aircraft family, according to Jane’s Information Group. Bangladesh signed a contract for 16 aircraft in 2011 and deliveries were completed by 2013.

The crash comes weeks after an Air India plane crashed into a medical college hostel in Ahmedabad in neighboring India, killing 241 of the 242 people on board and 19 on the ground in the world’s worst aviation disaster in a decade.


Nigeria’s Tuggar to Trump: state-backed religious persecution impossible under constitution

Nigeria’s Tuggar to Trump: state-backed religious persecution impossible under constitution
Updated 5 sec ago

Nigeria’s Tuggar to Trump: state-backed religious persecution impossible under constitution

Nigeria’s Tuggar to Trump: state-backed religious persecution impossible under constitution
BERLIN: Nigerian Foreign Minister Yusuf Tuggar said on Tuesday that state involvement in religious persecution was “impossible” in Nigeria under the country’s laws and constitution.
Speaking in Berlin alongside his German counterpart Johann Wadephul, Tuggar pointed to his country’s “constitutional commitment to religious freedom and rule of law.”
“This is what shows that it’s impossible for there to be a religious persecution that can be supported in any way, shape or form by the government of Nigeria at any level, be it federal, be it regional, be it local, it’s impossible,” he said.
He was responding to a question about US President Donald Trump’s warning of possible “fast” military action in Nigeria if it fails to crack down on the killing of Christians.