The death toll from the collapse of a school in Indonesia last week has increased to at least 50 people as rescuers have cleared nearly all of the debris.
Piles of concrete caved in on hundreds of mostly teenage boys after the collapse of the Al Khoziny Islamic boarding school in the Indonesian town of Sidoarjo, in East Java province, trapping and later killing them.
Using excavators, rescuers on Sunday night cleared 80% of the debris and found bodies and body parts of the mostly teenage victims, the disaster mitigation agency said in a statement.
Speaking at a press conference on Sunday, a deputy at the disaster mitigation agency, Budi Irawan, said a total of 50 people have died based on the bodies recovered and rescuers were expected to finish their search by the end of Monday for 13 more trapped victims.
Irawan said: “The number of victims is the biggest this year from one building.
“Out of all the disasters in 2025, natural or not, there hasn’t been as many dead victims as the ones in Sidoarjo.”
Indonesia school collapse: 26 missing as death toll rises to 37
A search and rescue agency official, Yudhi Bramantyo, said at the same news conference that five other body parts were found, indicating the death toll is likely at least 54 people.
Rescuers are continuing their search, with footage shared by the search and rescue agency showing recovery workers carrying orange body bags out of the ruins of the school.
Authorities told Reuters the cause of the collapse was construction work on the upper floors that the school’s foundations could not support.
Across Indonesia, there are about 42,000 Islamic school buildings, known locally as a pesantren, data from the country’s religious affairs ministry shows.
Only 50 pesantren have building permits, Dody Hanggodo, the country’s public works minister, was quoted by local media as saying on Sunday.
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