Foreign News
Hopes turn to anguish in Indonesia school collapse
Hopes for dozens of students feared trapped in rubble at a collapsed boarding school have turned to anguish as authorities shift their focus from rescue to recovery.
Suharyanto, the head of Indonesia’s National Disaster Management Agency, told a news conference on Thursday that thermal drones and other equipment had found “no additional signs of life” at Al-Khoziny Islamic Boarding School.
Relatives of the missing students collapsed in the streets around the site and wailed in anguish upon hearing the news.
Authorities said they would bring in heavy machinery to assist in recovery efforts.
Until now, they had resisted bringing in excavators to clear the debris for fear of harming anyone trapped alive.
Authorities have sealed off the school, which officials say collapsed as construction workers were laying concrete on the building’s fourth floor, as rescuers continue to painstakingly pick through the debris for the 59 people believed missing.
But even hundreds of metres from the scene, the smell of decomposing bodies was overwhelming.
The missing are “all dead”, said a junior police officer standing guard at the scene, asking not to be named. He said it had long been suspected that most of the students trapped inside the school had perished.
Family members who have been sleeping at the scene since Monday, when the building collapsed, lined up at an on-site tent on Thursday to give DNA samples in the hopes of identifying their loved ones.
Ahmad Ichsan, whose 14-year-old son Arif Affandi is believed to be trapped, wiped away tears and murmured a prayer as doctors from the neighbouring city of Surabaya prepared to take a buccal swab.
“He has been at the boarding school for two years and four months,” Ichsan, who is from Madura, an island about 33km northeast of Sidoarjo, told Al Jazeera.
“I sent him to school here so that he would learn to be a good son and be devoted to his parents and devoted to his country.” Ichsan said he found out about the collapse from the parent of another child in his son’s class. “I immediately came to the school. I have been here ever since,” he said. “They haven’t found him yet, but I still have hope he is alive.”

Late on Wednesday evening, five students were found alive in an air pocket of the collapsed building, fuelling hopes that more could be saved.
Those hopes seemed increasingly fragile on Thursday as the “golden window” – the critical 72-hour period cited by experts as crucial for finding disaster victims alive – expired.
Five students have been confirmed dead so far, and more than 100 people were injured.
Muhammad Sobir said he was holding out hope that his 13-year-old son, Nurdin, would be found alive.
“God willing, he will be found alive. I will stay here until they find him,” he told Al Jazeera.
Nurdin, from neighbouring Madura, had only been at the school for four months, Sobir said.
“We chose this boarding school as it is known for providing a high-quality education. Nurdin is a good boy, such a good boy, and so diligent in his studies,” he said.
Sobir said he did not know what had caused the school to collapse, but that it was not his primary focus.
“I don’t know what happened, but I can’t think about that at the moment,” he said.
“I saw what happened on television. I was actually watching it on the news at the time, and I rushed here, but no one has seen my boy.”
![Ahmad Ichsan, whose son is missing, provides a DNA sample at the site of the school collapse in Sidoarjo, East Java, Indonesia, on October 2, 2025 [Aisyah llewellyn/AL Jazeera]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/20251002_112942-1759392753.jpg?w=770&resize=770%2C578&quality=80)
Sobir’s wife, Nur Fatria, also gave a buccal swab to the forensic team. “I can’t even tell you what I feel having to do this test,” she told Al Jazeera. “I’m still in shock and confused. I don’t know what I feel any more. I have been here for four days.”
Deris, a forensic police doctor, said both parents of those missing are being asked to provide DNA samples so they can be cross-referenced.
[Aljazeera]
Foreign News
Naqvi casts uncertainty on Pakistan’s participation in T20 World Cup after Bangladesh ouster
Pakistan’s participation at the upcoming Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 has been thrown into uncertainty after the PCB chairman Mohsin Naqvi said a final decision would be made after talking to Pakistan’s government. Speaking shortly after the ICC officially removed Bangladesh from the T20 World Cup owing to their refusal to play in India, Naqvi accused the ICC of “double standards” favouring India, and termed what happened to Bangladesh “an injustice”.
“Our stance on World Cup participation will be what the government of Pakistan instructs me,” he said. “The Prime Minister is not in Pakistan right now. When he returns, I’ll be able to give you our final decision. It’s the government’s decision. We obey them, not the ICC.”
Over the past week or so, Pakistan has firmly thrown its support behind Bangladesh in their dispute with the ICC demanding a venue outside of India to play their T20 World Cup matches. At an ICC meeting last week, the PCB was understood to be the only board to back the BCB in their stance. The tournament is jointly hosted by India and Sri Lanka, but Bangladesh’s games were all scheduled in India. Bangladesh, however, have said it is no longer safe for them to play in India after the BCCI, on January 3, instructed Kilkata Knight Riders to release Mustafizur Rahman rom their IPL 2026 squad.
Though no reason was stated for that directive, it came amid deteriorating relations between India and Bangladesh. On January 4, the BCB wrote to the ICC after consultation with the government that the Bangladesh team would not travel to India for its T20 World Cup matches due to security concerns, a stance it stuck to through several subsequent discussions with the ICC.
The ICC has repeatedly refused Bangladesh’s request, and earlier this week gave them an ultimatum demanding them to accept the schedule as it was, or face being removed from the tournament. On Saturday, with Bangladesh sticking to their position, the ICC formally announced Bangladesh would not be part of the T20 World Cup, and would be replaced instead by Scotland.
Naqvi was critical of the decision, calling it an injustice to Bangladesh. “I think Bangladesh has been hard done by,” he said. “You can’t have double standards. You can’t say for one country [India] they can do whatever they want and for the others to have to do the complete opposite. That’s why we’ve taken this stand, and made clear Bangladesh have had an injustice done to them. They should play in the World Cup, they are a major stakeholder in cricket.”
While there have been local, unverified reports that the PCB would refuse to participate in the World Cup in solidarity with Bangladesh should they be removed, the PCB has declined to confirm to ESPNcricinfo when approached. Naqvi’s comments to the media on Saturday was the first time anyone at the PCB has directly addressed the issue, where he repeatedly said the decision was no longer in the hands of the PCB.
“If the government of Pakistan says we mustn’t play, then maybe the ICC will bring in a 22nd team (after Scotland). It’s up to the government.”
No specific reason was given by Naqvi other than to support Bangladesh, as to why government permission would now be required for an event that starts in two weeks. Last year, both BCCI and PCB, with the approval of ICC, signed up to a hybrid model agreement by which both countries would play each other on neutral territory for all global events in the 2024-27 rights cycle.
Pakistan play all their games in Sri Lanka for this event (which already was a co-hosted event) and are scheduled to play the opening game of the tournament, against Netherlands on February 7. They are scheduled to play India on February 15 in Colombo in their group stage clash.
[Cricinfo]
Foreign News
Indonesia landslide kills 7, dozens more missing
At least seven people have died and more than 80 others are missing after a landslide hit Indonesia’s West Java province, officials said.
The landslide occurred in the West Bandung region, south-east of the capital Jakarta, following days of intense rainfall.
More than thirty homes were destroyed after “landslide material buried residential areas, causing fatalities and affecting local residents”, Indonesia’s disaster mitigation agency said in a statement.
Flooding, landslide and extreme weather alerts have also been issued for the broader region.
The landslide hit the village of Pasirlangu around 02:30AM on Saturday [24] (19:30 GMT).
Two dozen people were evacuated safely from the affected region, according to Abdul Muhari, communication chief of the National Search Agency.
Images shared by local news outlets showed homes buried under mud and debris.
[BBC]
Foreign News
Alleged drug kingpin and ex-Olympian Ryan Wedding arrested after years on the run
Former Canadian Olympic snowboarder and alleged drug kingpin Ryan Wedding has been arrested in Mexico and will be extradited to the US after years on the run, FBI Director Kash Patel has said.
Wedding, who had been on the FBI’s Ten Most Wanted Fugitives list, is accused of running a transnational drug trafficking operation that moved tonnes of cocaine across international borders.
Wedding, 44, was also wanted on murder charges. US officials had said they believed Wedding was living in Mexico under the Sinaloa drug cartel’s protection.
The head of Canada’s federal police force, which assisted in the investigation, spoke alongside Patel on Friday to praise the law enforcement operation.
Wedding is accused of running a vast drug trafficking operation responsible for importing some 60 metric tonnes of cocaine a year.
The organisation operated across North America, as well as several countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, and was also the largest supplier of cocaine to Canada, bringing in an estimated $1bn a year.
Before he was arrested, Wedding was accused of killing a federal witness in a case against him. Officials say he has also ordered the murders of several others.
Wedding is now facing a slew of felony charges, including witness tampering and intimidation, murder, money laundering and drug trafficking.
The FBI had previously placed a $15m (£11m) reward for information leading to his arrest. Patel declined to comment on whether anyone would be claiming the reward money.
US officials have released limited details regarding how Wedding was captured, except to say that his arrest took place on Thursday night in Mexico City.
Mexico’s top security official, Omar García Harfuch, said in a post on X that Patel had visited Mexico City on Thursday, and departed with two fugitives on the FBI’s 10 Most Wanted list.
He did not name the men arrested, but said one was a “Canadian citizen who voluntarily surrendered” at the US embassy in Mexico.
The Associated Press, citing an unnamed Mexican Security Cabinet member, reported that Wedding is the Canadian who turned himself in at the US embassy.
In his remarks at a news conference, Patel described Wedding as a “modern-day Pablo Escobar”, referring to the Colombian cartel leader. US officials have also compared him to Mexican drug dealer Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán.
“When you go after a guy like Ryan Wedding, it takes a united front,” Patel said, thanking Canadian and Mexican authorities for their help in the investigation.
Patel also thanked the FBI Hostage Rescue Team, who participated in taking Wedding into custody.
In an interview with Vanity Fair, Patel praised the team, which had also been involved in the capture of Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro weeks earlier.
“This was a complex, high-stakes operation with zero margin for error,” Patel told the magazine.
“I was on the ground with our team in Mexico and witnessed extraordinary teamwork, precision, and trust between our agents and partners in Mexico.”
Wedding’s aliases include “El Jefe,” “Giant,” “Public Enemy,” “James Conrad King,” and “Jesse King”, the FBI said. He has reportedly had plastic surgery to change his appearance while on the run.
Officials allege that he launched his criminal enterprise following his release from a US federal prison in 2011, where he was serving a sentence for cocaine distribution.
Authorities allege he has ordered dozens of murders across the globe, including in the US, Canada and Latin America.

It is unclear to whom the medals belong. Wedding competed for Canada in the 2002 Olympic Games in Salt Lake City, but did not win any medals. He came in 24th place in the men’s giant parallel slalom ski event.
In November, the FBI seized his rare 2002 Mercedes CLK-GTR, which had been valued at $13m.
Patel also spoke about the recent arrest of another man in Mexico who had been on the FBI’s most wanted list.
American man Alejandro Castillo was wanted for the murder of his ex-girlfriend. According to the FBI, he has been in hiding in Mexico for nearly 10 years, and will now be extradited back to North Carolina for trial.
(BBC)
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