Lahore roof collapse turns a tuition class into a mass-casualty scene
Children were in class at a private tuition centre near Lahore while construction work was under way above them, then the roof collapsed, killing 14 schoolchildren.

Children were in class at a private tuition centre near Lahore while construction work was under way above them, then the roof collapsed, killing 14 schoolchildren.
XOOMAR Intelligence
The Lahore roof collapse happened in Kahna, a suburb of Pakistan’s eastern city, with young children among those pulled from the rubble, according to BBC World. Emergency service Rescue 1122 said it received the call at 16:45 (12:45 BST), and spokesman Farooq Ahmed told the BBC the rescue operation was completed within one hour.
The site was a tuition centre, not a regular school campus. That distinction matters because the early account from police and rescue officials focuses on the building itself: a roof failure, reported construction activity, and children trapped inside rooms being used for lessons.
“The children are very young in age, and there were two rooms in use. The ceilings collapsed and trapped the children,” Farooq Ahmed told Dawn News, according to Gulf News.
BBC reported that most of those recovered were between seven and 11 years old, and that children under 10 were among those taken from the scene. It said another five people were thought to be injured. AP, citing senior police official Faisal Kamran, reported eight injured children were being treated at a hospital.
Those figures may change as hospitals and authorities reconcile lists.
Early reported tolls:
| Detail | Reported figure or status |
|---|---|
| Children killed | 14 |
| Injured | 5 reported by BBC, 8 reported by AP |
| Call received by Rescue 1122 | 16:45 (12:45 BST) |
| Most recovered children | Seven to 11 years old, according to BBC |
| Location | Kahna, Lahore suburb |
| Site | Private tuition centre |
AP photos from the scene showed women mourning beside the bodies of children and slippers left behind at the collapsed site. Witnesses told AP that ambulances and rescue workers rushed in after the roof gave way.
Authorities have taken two people into custody as part of the initial inquiry into the Kahna tuition centre collapse, the BBC reported.
AP identified those detained as the owner of the tutoring center and another person, citing Faisal Kamran. Gulf News, citing Geo News, reported that police detained the building owner and the contractor who had recently carried out construction work on the house.
That gives investigators a narrow first lane: who controlled the building, who oversaw the work, and why children were inside when the roof failed.
Police have not yet released final findings on the cause. AP reported Kamran said the tutoring centre was housed in an aging building, and that the roof of an unfinished second floor apparently collapsed because of poor construction quality. Gulf News reported that construction work was under way on the upper floor while classes were being held on the ground floor.
The immediate before-and-after is stark:
Punjab Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz directed police and district authorities to identify those responsible and begin criminal proceedings, Gulf News reported.
For readers following XOOMAR’s global breaking coverage, this Lahore case sits in our wider file of fast-moving fatal incidents, separate from security stories such as Gunfire at San Jose World Cup Fan Zone Kills 1, Injures 1 and Monaco Explosion Unleashes Manhunt After Backpack Blast. The facts here are different: the known focus is a structural collapse at a children’s learning site.
The most important unresolved question is not only why the roof failed. It’s why the building was occupied by children at the moment it did.
Gulf News, citing rescue officials, said more than 30 children were inside the private tuition centre when the roof collapsed. It also reported that 19 injured children were taken to Kahna Hospital, where 14 died and five remained under treatment, citing Punjab Health Minister Khawaja Imran Nazir and Geo News.
That account aligns with the BBC’s central death toll, but the injury numbers differ across reports. In a developing disaster, that gap usually reflects different reporting points: rescue officials at the site, police statements, and hospital admissions. XOOMAR is not treating any single injury figure as final until authorities consolidate the count.
AP reported rescuers were searching through rubble after receiving reports that more children could be trapped. BBC said Rescue 1122’s Farooq Ahmed reported the rescue operation was completed within one hour. Gulf News said Lahore Police stated rescue operations concluded by 7pm.
Those timelines are not necessarily contradictory. They may refer to different phases: extraction, site clearance, and police control. But officials have not yet publicly released a full operational timeline.
The next official statements should clarify four things: the final casualty count, the medical status of the injured children, the role of the detained people, and the technical cause of the roof failure.
Investigators are likely to focus on the facts already in the record: reported construction activity on the upper floor, the condition of the building, and whether any recent work weakened the structure. No official final cause has been released.
Police and rescue officials have supplied the first frame. Courts and prosecutors, if charges follow, will need a tighter one.
The watch item now is whether Punjab authorities limit the response to this one building, or order checks on similar occupied tuition sites after the Lahore roof collapse. Families will want speed. A credible inquiry still has to answer the harder question: who knew children were sitting below that roof, and what, if anything, was done to keep it standing.
| Category | BBC report | AP report |
|---|---|---|
| Children killed | 14 | 14 |
| Injured | 5 people thought to be injured | 8 injured children treated at hospital |
Written by
Research and Editorial Desk
The XOOMAR Insights Team pairs automated research with human editorial judgment. We track hundreds of sources across technology, fintech, trading, SaaS, and cybersecurity, cross-check the facts, and explain what happened, why it matters, and what to watch next. We do not just rewrite headlines. Every article is fact-checked and scored for reliability before it goes live, and we link back to the original sources so you can verify anything yourself.
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