The Uttara Milestone School Plane Crash is not merely an aviation accident—it is a chilling symbol of state negligence. This wasn’t just about twisted metal and burning debris; this was the death of childhood dreams and the collapse of public safety.
How could a training aircraft, flown by a cadet, crash into one of the busiest school zones in the capital during class hours? Why was a combat aircraft even allowed to fly in a densely populated area like Uttara? The questions are simple—the answers are scandalous.
Teachers recounted how children were on fire, how colleagues collapsed before their eyes. But the authorities responded with cold phrases like: “It was just a training error.”

No, this was no minor mistake. This was an institutional failure. One where the lives of children were treated as expendable.
From 2017 to 2023, and now again—how many times must we witness similar crashes before actual reform takes place? What protocols failed? Who approved flight paths over schools?
Will we keep forgiving this system? Or will someone—anyone—take responsibility?
Parents carried back ashes instead of school bags. No government press release can console that grief. If silence continues, it won’t just be aircraft falling—it will be our trust in the state that crashes next.
The Uttara Milestone School Plane Crash must be the last of its kind. The time to investigate, reform, and protect our skies is now—before another tragedy strikes.




















