Indonesian rescuers hunt 38 missing after Islamic school collapse

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Rescue personnel carry an injured student during a search operation after a building collapsed at an Islamic boarding school in Sidoarjo, East Java province on September 29, 2025, injuring a number of students and trapping several others under the rubble. (AFP)
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Medical personnel wait beside an ambulance as rescue personnel search for survivors after a building collapsed at an Islamic boarding school in Sidoarjo, East Java province on September 29, 2025. (AFP)
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A relative of a victim of a collapsed building reacts, after a hall collapsed while students were praying at the Al-Khoziny Islamic boarding school in Sidoarjo, East Java, Indonesia, September 30, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 30 September 2025
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Indonesian rescuers hunt 38 missing after Islamic school collapse

  • Police, soldiers and rescue workers dug into the debris through the night in attempts to locate at least three additional students believed trapped alive

JAKARTA: Indonesian rescuers were scrambling on Tuesday to locate 38 people feared trapped under rubble after an Islamic boarding school collapsed in the province of East Java while dozens were at afternoon prayer, disaster mitigation authorities said.
One person was killed and 102 evacuated in Monday’s incident at the Al Khoziny school in the town of Sidoarjo when the unstable building collapsed during construction, the disaster mitigation agency said in a statement.
“This sudden occurrence caused building material to fall on dozens of students and workers,” agency spokesperson Abdul Muhari said.
A bulldozer was among the heavy equipment he said searchers were using to shift the rubble, while nearly 80 injured were taken to hospital.
Video images from news channel KompasTV showed families of students clustered around a whiteboard looking at a list of survivors.
The agency said the building’s foundations allegedly could not support the weight of construction on its fourth floor. 


New deadly clashes break out on Afghanistan-Pakistan border despite truce

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New deadly clashes break out on Afghanistan-Pakistan border despite truce

  • At least 5 people were killed, 5 injured on the Afghan side, Taliban authorities say
  • Latest clash comes amid reports of back-channel negotiations between the two countries

KABUL: Overnight border clashes have broken out between Afghan and Pakistani forces, authorities in Afghanistan said on Saturday, as tensions between the neighbors escalated following a fragile ceasefire. 

The latest exchange of fire that spanned Spin Boldak and Chaman, a key crossing between southeastern Afghanistan’s Kandahar province and Pakistan’s Balochistan, marked violations of a ceasefire that has been in place since October. 

The truce brokered by Qatar and Turkey has mostly held for the past two months, after dozens were killed on both sides in what was the deadliest confrontation in years between Afghanistan and Pakistan. 

But heavy gunfire and shelling erupted again late on Friday, with each side blaming the other for sparking the deadly violence. 

“Unfortunately, last night the Pakistani side once again attacked Spin Boldak in Kandahar. The forces of the Islamic Emirate had to respond,” Hamdullah Fitrat, deputy spokesperson of Afghanistan’s Taliban government, told Arab News on Saturday. 

He said five people on the Afghan side — including four civilians — were killed in the violence, while five others were injured. 

Mosharraf Zaidi, spokesman for Pakistan’s prime minister, said that the Taliban “resorted to unprovoked firing” along their shared border. 

“An immediate, befitting & intense response has been given by our armed forces. Pakistan remains fully alert & committed to ensuring its territorial integrity & the safety of our citizens,” he wrote on X. 

Local residents in Spin Boldak told Arab News that Friday’s clashes forced families to flee their homes. 

“Mortars and bullets smashed into houses and public places,” Samiullah Malang said. “It was difficult … (to) watch women and children flee on motorbikes, tractors and on foot in the cold night.” 

Although the fighting largely subsided around midnight, sporadic gunfire continued into the morning, he added. 

The overnight violence also reached the Friendship Gate, an official crossing point between Spin Boldak and Chaman, which was closed by Pakistan authorities after the fighting. 

Clashes at the border have led to repeated closures of the key border crossing, devastating commerce and disrupting the movement of thousands. 

“Every time Pakistan shuts the gate, our fruits rot inside the trucks,” said Afghan businessman Haji Rahmatullah. “Hotels are filled with patients waiting to cross for treatment.”

After the ceasefire agreement in October, subsequent talks for a long-term truce have so far yielded little progress. The latest deadly exchange of fire comes amid reports of back-channel negotiations between Afghan and Pakistani officials, which neither governments have openly confirmed. 

Both sides remain deeply divided on core security issues and repeated clashes highlight the absence of an effective de-escalation mechanism, according to Asad Waheedi, a political analyst based in Kabul. 

“The talks are not bearing fruit because the demands are unrealistic,” he said. “Pakistan asks the Taliban to guarantee the security of their country. This is impossible. Even when America had all its troops here, it could not guarantee Afghanistan’s security. The Taliban have no presence there (in Pakistan). It is an impractical demand.”

Clashes between Afghan and Pakistani forces along the Durand Line — their 2,640-km border — have occurred for decades but intensified after the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in 2021, following the withdrawal of US-led troops.

Pakistan accuses the Afghan Taliban of sheltering fighters from the banned Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and allowing them to stage cross-border attacks — a charge Afghanistan denies, saying it does not allow its territory to be used against other countries.

The deadly violence in October was triggered by an unclaimed explosion in Kabul and another in the southeastern province of Paktika, for which the Afghan government blamed the Pakistani military. 

“The facts show that the distance between them is huge,” Waheedi said. “Until the demands become practical, these talks will go nowhere, and the fighting will continue.”