Jet Crash Horror: Chaos Erupts as Fighter Plane Hits Bangladesh Primary Schoo
By Admin âą Sun Jul 27 2025

đ„ âIt Was Like Thunder Falling From the Skyâ â Chaos and Courage as Fighter Jet Crashes Into Bangladesh School
By BBC News â Reporting from Dhaka, Bangladesh
âIt felt like 30 or 40 thunderbolts falling from the sky,â said 18-year-old Ahnaf Bin Hasan, his voice still shaking two days after witnessing a disaster that would change his life forever.
Ahnaf was standing just 30 feet from the impact zone when a Bangladesh Air Force F-7 fighter jet nosedived into the primary section of Milestone School and College in Dhakaâs Uttara neighborhood.
âIâve never heard anything like it,â he recalled. âIn a split second, the jet flew right over my head and crashed into the building. I hit the ground and covered my head. When I opened my eyesâeverything was on fire. Smoke. Screaming. It was chaos.â
The crash on Monday became Bangladeshâs deadliest aviation disaster in decades, killing at least 31 people, many of them schoolchildren under the age of 12. Some had been waiting for pickup, some were heading to after-school coaching, and others were simply grabbing a snack.
đ„ A Normal Day Turned Nightmare
Ahnaf, dressed in his chocolate brown shirt and black trousers, was chatting with a friend on the schoolâs 12-acre playground when the aircraft came down. A flaming shard from the wreckage scorched his hand and set his backpack on fire.
âBut I threw it aside,â he said. âAnd I ran toward the school.â
The fighter jet had smashed through the front gate, dug six to seven feet into the ground, then launched into the air again before slamming into the first floorâdirectly into two classrooms called Cloud and Sky. A massive explosion followed.
Ahnaf ran toward the smoke and screams. One boyâs body lay torn near the gate. âHe must have been hit directly by the jet,â Ahnaf said. âHe looked younger than us.â
đ§đœ Students Burned, Screaming â and Acts of Heroism
Inside, children fled the building, their clothes burned off, their skin blistered. Some were screaming from windows on the second floor. One woman was on fire. Others, too dazed to cry, simply walked through the smoke.
Ahnaf spotted a younger student, badly burned and carried by a friend. âHe said, âI canât do this alone, can you help me?â So I carried the boy on my shoulder to the medical room.â
He broke open gates, cleared paths for ambulances, and even gave the shirt off his back to another boy whose clothes had burned away. âI continued bare-bodied with the rescue,â he said.
đ Loss Beyond Words
Among the victims was 11-year-old Wakia Firdous Nidhi, the youngest of three siblings. That morning had started like any otherâshe walked to school with her usual smile.
When the crash happened, her father ran barefoot from the mosque. The family searched through the night, visiting multiple hospitals, until her father identified herâby her teeth and a problem in her eye.
But bureaucracy made the heartbreak worse.
Despite the clear identification, authorities refused to release the body until DNA results confirmed it. âWe know itâs her,â said her uncle, Syed Billal Hossain. âBut they still wonât give us the body.â
Wakia grew up in the familyâs ancestral home in Diabari. âShe was always laughing, always playing with her niece,â her uncle said, barely holding back tears. âIf not for that coaching class, sheâd still be here.â
âš Near Misses and Random Survival
One mother, her voice trembling, told BBC Bengali she had given her son money to buy food instead of packing tiffin that day. During break, he stepped out to buy a snackâand survived.
âHeâs alive because I didnât pack his lunch,â she said.
But another father lived through unimaginable tragedy. His daughter died in the crash. After her funeral, he returned to the hospital to find that his son, too, had succumbed to injuries.
đ©ïž What Caused the Crash?
The Bangladesh Air Force reported that the F-7 was on a training flight when it suffered a mechanical failure shortly after takeoff. The pilot ejected moments before the crash but later died in hospital.
âI saw his parachute,â said Ahnaf. âHe landed through the tin roof of another building. I heard he asked for water before they airlifted him.â
đŻïž A School Silenced
Milestone School and Collegeâonce full of laughter, lessons, and lifeâis now a scene of devastation. Twisted metal, blackened walls, and grief hang heavy in the air.
For students like Ahnaf, the trauma will take years to fade.
âThe screams⊠theyâre still in my ears,â he said.