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2 Oct 2025 11:06
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  •   Home > News > International

    Five people pulled alive from site of Indonesia school collapse as rescuers race against time to find others

    Authorities say those rescued alive were able to communicate with rescuers, with another three people killed in the disaster also pulled from the rubble.

    2 October 2025

    Rescuers have pulled five survivors from a collapsed school in Indonesia as frantic parents demanded searchers speed up efforts to find dozens of children believed still trapped in the rubble two days on.

    Part of the multi-storey boarding school, in the town of Sidoarjo on the island of Java, gave way suddenly on Monday, local time, as students gathered for afternoon prayers.

    "Today (Wednesday) we managed to evacuate seven victims, five of them were rescued alive, and two were found dead," Yudhi Bramantyo, operational director of the search and rescue services, told a press briefing in Sidoarjo, 30 kilometres from the city of Surabaya.

    "The five survivors were able to communicate," he added.

    At least six people have now been killed in the disaster.

    A magnitude-6.5 quake complicated the rescue work compacting the rubble, reducing the available space to manoeuvre at the site, Indonesia's search and rescue agency said.

    The earthquake struck the region of Sumenep, about 200 kilometres from the school, injuring three people and damaging dozens of homes, authorities said.

    Parents plea for faster rescue efforts

    Tearful parents milled near the ruins throughout on Wednesday awaiting news.

    Based on school records "91 people are suspected to be buried," National Disaster and Mitigation Agency spokesperson Abdul Muhari said in a statement late on Tuesday.

    "We believe our children might still be alive because they were crying for help," said father Abdul Hanan, whose 14-year-old son is missing. "The rescue operation must be accelerated.

    "We are racing against time now," the 45-year-old added, bursting into tears.

    Investigations into the cause of the collapse are ongoing but initial signs point to structural issues and construction that did not meet building standards, experts said.

    Dewi Sulistiana was awaiting news of her 14-year-old son she was last in touch with on Sunday. The boarding school limits student access to mobile phones.

    She rushed to the scene from Surabaya, several dozen kilometres away after hearing about the collapse.

    "I have been here for days. I cried thinking about my son," she told AFP. "Why is taking so long to find him, why is the search so slow? I haven't had any updates, so I just wait."

    Rescuers tunnelling to reach those trapped

    The rescue operation is complex, said Mohammad Syafii, head of the National Search and Rescue Agency.

    "If vibration happens in one spot, it could affect other places. So now, to reach the spot where the victims are, we have to dig an underground tunnel," he told reporters.

    Digging itself poses challenges, including possible landslides.

    Any tunnel will only provide an access route around 60-centimetres wide because of the structure's concrete columns.

    Technology, including thermal-sensing drones, is being used to locate survivors and the deceased as the 72-hour "golden period" for best survival chances nears its end.

    AFP saw rescuers in orange uniforms appearing to snake cameras under the rubble to hunt for traces of survivors.

    So far, signs of life have been detected in seven areas, said rescue official Emi Freezer of the National Search and Rescue Agency.

    Water and food was being sent in, but access was through a single point, he said.

    Complicating the operation, an earthquake struck offshore overnight, briefly halting the search.

    Around the ruins, local charitable organisations have set up posts offering families food and drink.

    The school collapse was so violent it sent tremors across the neighbourhood, said local resident Ani.

    "I felt a vibration and then I heard a noise. I immediately ran to save myself. I didn't realise at first it was a building collapse," the grocery stall owner told AFP.

    "Many people then also ran to save themselves," she added.

    The building folded after its foundation pillars failed to support the weight of new construction on the fourth floor of the school, said the national disaster management agency spokesman.

    Lax construction standards have raised widespread concerns about building safety in Indonesia, where it is common to leave structures, particularly houses, partially completed, allowing owners to add extra floors later when their budgets permits.

    Earlier this month, at least three people were killed and dozens injured when a building hosting a prayer recital collapsed in West Java province.

    AFP/ABC


    ABC




    © 2025 ABC, NZCity


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