Two men have died in a plane crash at Oakey, west of Brisbane.
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ABC News
2 hours ago
- ABC News
At least 19 people killed as Bangladesh Air Force plane crashes into college campus
At least 19 people have been killed after a Bangladesh Air Force training jet crashed into a school and college campus in Dhaka, a fire services official said. More than 50 people, including children and adults, were hospitalised with burns, a doctor at the National Institute of Burn and Plastic Surgery told reporters. The incident occurred at the Milestone School and College in Dhaka's northern area of Uttara, officials said. "Bangladesh Air Force's F-7 BGI training aircraft crashed in Uttara," the military's public relations department said in a statement. Videos from the scene show flames and thick black smoke rising from the campus lawn, as onlookers watched from a distance. Firefighters were seen spraying water on the wreckage of the jet, which appears to have slammed into the side of a building. Bangladesh's interim leader, Muhammad Yunus, called the losses "irreparable" and promised a full investigation and support for the victims and their families. The crash comes just over a month after an Air India plane struck a medical college in Ahmedabad, India which killed 241 passengers and crew and 19 people on the ground. ABC/Reuters


ABC News
3 hours ago
- ABC News
Four Corners: S2025 God Complex
ABC iview Home Watch all your favourite ABC programs on ABC iview. More from ABC We acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands where we live, learn and work.

ABC News
3 hours ago
- ABC News
Funding to assist SA to deal with algal bloom, but no national disaster declaration
On today's show: The federal government has pledged $14 million to assist South Australia as it continues to deal with a toxic algal bloom outbreak, but has stopped short of declaring it a national disaster. Calls are ramping up to recognise the devastating algal bloom as a national emergency. The bloom is now said to cover an area twice that of the ACT, decimating fisheries and deterring tourists from visiting. Ian Mitchell is a fisherman and the manager of the main fish market in Adelaide. He says South Australians are baulking at buying fish as they are unwilling to eat fish that they think is tainted by the algal bloom. Reporter: Sinead Mangan, Thomas Kelsall There are many reasons people choose to live where they do; work, family, or because it's the town they grew up in. But data shows your postcode has a direct link to life expectancy, with those in very remote parts of Queensland, likely to die six years earlier than people in major cities. So why is there such a great divide, what are the challenges of growing old in the outback? Reporter: Jessica Ross (Sunshine Coast) Several First Nations people say they were forcibly removed from their families in Western Australia after the cut-off date for the state's new redress scheme. Children of Stolen Generations survivors who died waiting for reparations say their suffering must also be acknowledged. Advocates are urging the state government to expand the scheme's eligibility criteria. Reporter: Bridget McArthur (Bunbury)