Bangladesh 5.5-magnitude earthquake – what we know so far

At least five people were killed and many others were hurt in Bangladesh’s immediate vicinity of Dhaka, the government said on Friday.

What we currently know is as follows.

What transpired?

Bangladesh was struck by a magnitude 5.5 earthquake at 10:38 a.m. (04:38 GMT), according to the US Geological Survey (USGS). 26 seconds of shaking was experienced.

Shadman Sakif Islam, a resident of Dhaka, claimed that as the earthquake started to spread, “a massive shake” started to appear as a result of “small ripples” he noticed in his coffee.

He continued, “My chair and the table started shaking wildly, and I was stuck there for ten to fifteen seconds without thinking about what was happening.”

He continued, “I’ve never felt this way in my entire life; I felt like going on a boat and going through massive waves one after another.”

Following an earthquake in Dhaka, Bangladesh on November 21, 2025, residents fled their homes and were standing near collapsed scaffolding.

Where did the earthquake strike in Bangladesh?

Near Narsingdi, which is 33 kilometers (16 miles) from Dhaka, the tremor was felt. The quake’s aftermath caused extensive damage to numerous buildings in Dhaka.

According to the Bangladesh Meteorological Department, the epicentre was in Madhabdi, in Narsingdi.

More than 325 kilometers (roughly 200 miles) away from the epicentre, the tremors could be felt in the nearby Indian city of Kolkata. There haven’t been any reports of injuries there.

Narsingdi’s textile-related industry and craft are well-known.

Interactive_Bangaldesh_Earthquale_Nov21_2025-1763729110
(Al Jazeera)

What are the casualties’ details known to us?

At least five people have died and roughly 100 have been hurt, according to government figures.

Higher death toll figures have not been confirmed, but local media has reported them.

At least six people died in the capital on Friday, according to DBC Television, three of whom were killed when a building’s roof and wall collapsed, and three people who were struck by falling railings.

In Bangladesh, how common are earthquakes?

Bangladesh is seismically vulnerable because it is close to the Indian, Eurasian, and Burmese tectonic plates and is therefore seismically vulnerable. However, earthquakes do not occur frequently in Bangladesh.

According to the German Research Center for Geosciences (GFZ), an earthquake of magnitude 5.8 occurred near Sylhet in northeastern Bangladesh in 2023. No serious injuries or harm from the earthquake were reported.

A magnitude 6. 1 earthquake struck the Indian-Myanmar border in 2021. Chittagong and Cox, Bangladesh, both felt tremors. In Bangladesh, there haven’t been any confirmed deaths.

The scale’s magnitude is determined using a logarithmic scale, which means that for every whole-number increase on the scale, the magnitude increases by a factor of 10 for each digit increase.

India’s Tejas fighter jet crashes at Dubai Airshow, pilot dies

An Indian-made fighter jet has gone down in flames at the Dubai Airshow, killing the pilot in the second known crash of the aircraft.

The HAL Tejas, a combat aircraft, crashed just after 2pm local time (10: 00 GMT) on Friday during a demonstration for a crowd of spectators at Dubai World Central, where the last day of the airshow was under way.

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The Indian Air Force (IAF) confirmed on social media that the pilot sustained “fatal injuries” and said it was launching an inquiry to determine what caused the crash.

“IAF deeply regrets the loss of life and stands firmly with the bereaved family in this time of grief”, the statement added.

Photos published by Indian media outlets showed the plane engulfed in flames and a wall of black smoke. A witness told Reuters news agency that the plane was flying at low altitude before appearing to rapidly descend in a ball of fire.

The crash sent sirens reverberating across Al Maktoum International Airport, where the biennial aviation event was expected to draw about 150, 000 people this year. It was not immediately clear if anyone else was injured.

The Government of Dubai Media Office wrote on X that the pilot’s death was “tragic” and posted a photo of crews appearing to hose down debris at the site of the crash.

“Firefighting and emergency teams responded rapidly to the incident and are currently managing the situation on-site”, the office said.

Air demonstrations resumed less than two hours later as emergency workers finished clearing the scene.

The Tejas jet, built by India’s state-run Hindustan Aeronautics Limited, has been a key symbol of New Delhi’s attempt to modernise its air force fleet, especially as China helps neighbouring Pakistan shore up its own air capabilities.

The crash and death in Dubai are another blow to the Indian Air Force.

In May, India and Pakistan engaged in their heaviest fighting in decades – involving fighter jets and cruise missiles – after armed men killed more than two dozen tourists in Indian-administered Kashmir’s town of Pahalgam in April. New Delhi blamed Islamabad for the attack, which the latter vehemently denied.

Pakistan claimed to have downed at least five Indian jets during the conflict, which India initially brushed off as “disinformation”. But a top Indian general admitted in June that Indian forces had indeed lost an unspecified number of jets.

United States President Donald Trump also asserted in July that “five, four or five, but I think five jets” were shot down, without providing more detail.

By November, an annual report to US Congress by the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission said that the conflict “showcased Chinese weaponry”, though it referred to the loss of just three jets flown by the Indian military.

China provided more than 80 percent of Pakistan’s arms imports from 2019 to 2023, the report added.

Explosion at glue factory in eastern Pakistan kills at least 16

According to Pakistani media reports, an explosion at a glue-making factory in Pakistan caused at least 16 injuries and caused fires to rage nearby homes.

On Friday, at around 5 a.m. (GMT) in the Malikpur district of Faisalabad, west of Lahore, in Punjab province, the explosion took place in the west of Lahore.

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Local media reports that Faisalabad Commissioner Raja Jahangir Anwar was one of the people who first learned a gas leak inside the factory’s chemical warehouse was the cause of the explosion.

Authorities detained the factory manager, but they were still looking for the owner, who quickly fled the scene.

According to Pakistani channel Aaj TV, the blast flattened the factory’s roof and those of a few other nearby homes, sparking fires in at least three of them. Rescue teams crowding into the interior of a burning building from a central blast site in photos that the channel released.

According to authorities, six children were among the victims, the majority of whom were from nearby homes.

According to the TV station Geo News, rescue teams dug people out of piles of rubble and searched for them. A nearby hospital was treating the seven injured patients.

At least three killed as magnitude 5.5 earthquake hits Bangladesh

Countries sharply split on fossil fuels on COP30 climate summit final day

Countries remain bitterly divided over the future of fossil fuels as the 2025 United Nations Climate Change Conference, known as COP30, is slated to end in Brazil’s northern city of Belem, potentially in a haze of recriminations.

Delegates at the two-week conference have failed to reach a deal as Brazil circulated a new draft proposal on Thursday that did not include a roadmap to transitioning away from fossil fuels – nor mention the term “fossil fuels” at all.

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More than 30 other countries from Africa, Europe, Asia and the Pacific co-signed a letter in response, slamming the draft and saying they “cannot support an outcome that does not include a roadmap for implementing a just, orderly and equitable transition” from nonrenewable energy sources.

The commitment to moving away from fossil fuels – including&nbsp, natural gas, coal and crude oil – was considered a landmark achievement of COP28 in Dubai. Even then, the deal stopped short of calling for a “phase-out” amid fierce lobbying from oil-producing countries.

A first draft of the COP30 text, which was publicised on Tuesday, did contain the option of building a roadmap away from such fuels.

But major producers and consumers, including China, India, Saudi Arabia and Russia, rejected the proposal, several news outlets reported, quoting negotiators familiar with discussions.

The United States – which backed a phase-out in 2023 under former President Joe Biden – did not send a delegation to this year’s conference.

US President Donald Trump has long slammed the climate crisis and global warming as a “hoax”.

Another point of contention is climate finance, meaning money to help countries adapt to climate change. Brazil’s newest draft calls for tripling climate financing by 2030 compared with 2025 levels.

But it left unclear who exactly would provide the financing, whether it be wealthy states, the private sector or multilateral development banks. Western countries have historically baulked at providing cash to poorer nations dealing with the worst climate change effects.

Speaking to reporters on Thursday, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the conference was “down to the wire” and urged countries to “address disinformation aimed at derailing the transition”.

“Communities on the front lines are watching too, counting flooded homes, failed harvests, lost livelihoods”, he added. “They have heard enough excuses”.

Infrastructure, wiring woes

A fire forced thousands of delegates to evacuate the conference on Thursday, while the languishing negotiations were also interrupted.

As lunch was being served, flames quickly erupted in an exhibition pavilion and quickly sprang up the structure’s internal shell.

No injuries were reported despite 19 people receiving treatment for smoke inhalation, according to event and fire officials.

Throughout COP30, which is taking place on the edge of the Amazon rainforest, delegates have reported numerous issues with electrical wiring, air conditioning, and infrastructure.

In Belem, hundreds of protesters have also marched to make demands on environmental activists and indigenous people.

The UN and COP30 leaders said the fire site was “safe” in a joint statement on Thursday evening, reversing the focus on the potential weekend-long negotiations.

How Trump’s absence marks leadership opportunity for China at G20

US President Donald Trump’s decision to snub the G20 summit in South Africa this year has handed an opportunity to China, as it seeks to expand its growing influence in the African continent and position itself as an alternative to the dangers of a unilateralist United States.

Washington said it would not attend the two-day summit set to kick off on Saturday over widely discredited claims that the host country, previously ruled by its white minority under an apartheid system until 1994, now mistreats white people.

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South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa hit back at Trump’s claim that hosting the summit in Johannesburg was a “total disgrace”. “Boycott politics doesn’t work,” Ramaphosa said, adding that the US was “giving up the very important role that they should be playing as the biggest economy in the world”.

By Friday morning, Trump appeared to have backtracked on his stance somewhat, when speculation that Washington might send a US official to Johannesburg after all circulated.

Regardless, the spat comes as Chinese President Xi Jinping sends Premier Li Qiang to represent him on the world stage. China’s 72-year-old president has dialled back foreign visits, increasingly delegating his top emissary.

“The US is giving China an opportunity to expand its global influence,” Zhiqun Zhu, professor of political science and international relations at Bucknell University, told Al Jazeera. “With the absence of the US, China and EU countries will be the focus of the summit and other countries will look for leadership [from them].”

But observers say that while Trump’s absence will direct heightened attention to Beijing’s statements and behaviour, it does not spell the end of the US-led order altogether.

Jing Gu, a political economist at the United Kingdom-based Institute of Development Studies, said the US’s failure to attend “does not automatically make China the new leader, but it creates visible space for China to present itself as a more stable, reliable partner in governance”.

“It reinforces the perception that the US is stepping back from multilateralism and the shared management of global problems,” she said. “In that context, China can present itself as a more predictable, stable actor and emphasise continuity, support for open trade and engagement with the Global South.”

Expanding influence in the African continent

This year’s G20 will, for the first time, have an African chair and take place on the African continent. The African Union (AU) will also participate fully as a member.

South Africa, which holds the G20 presidency, is expected to push for consensus and action on priority issues for African countries, including debt relief, economic growth, climate change and transition to clean energy.

Zhu, who also serves as editor-in-chief of the academic journal, China and the World, said South Africa’s themes were a “natural fit” for China, Africa’s largest trading partner.

“China aims to become a leader in green energy, and there’s a lot of room for China and African countries to work on that,” he said.

The African continent, with its mineral wealth, booming population and fast-growing economies, offers huge potential for Chinese firms. Li, China’s premier, travelled to Zambia this week, marking the first visit to the country by a Chinese premier in 28 years. The copper-rich nation has Beijing as its largest official creditor for $5.7bn.

Eager to secure access to Zambia’s commodities and expand its exports from resource-rich East Africa, China signed a $1.4bn deal in September to rehabilitate the Tazara Railway, built in the 1970s and connecting Tanzania and Zambia, to improve rail-sea transportation in the region.

“The Chinese economy and African economy are complementary; they both benefit from trade,” Zhu said. The G20 “is a great platform for China to project its global influence and seek opportunities to work with other countries”, he added.

Africa’s growing demand for energy and China’s dominance in manufacturing make the two a good fit, observers say. This is playing out. A report by energy think tank Ember, for instance, found Africa’s imports of solar panels from China rose a whopping 60 percent in the 12 months to June 2025.

According to Gu at the Institute of Development Studies, China will be looking to tap into this growing synergy with Africa and will deliver a three-fold message at this year’s G20.

“First, it will stress stability and the importance of global rules and regulations,” she said. Second, “it will link the G20 to the Global South and highlight issues like development and green transformation”.

Third, “by offering issue-based leadership on topics such as digital economy, artificial intelligence and governance, it will position itself as a problem-solver rather than a disruptor”, the economist added.

China as a bastion of multilateralism

An absence of American officials at this year’s G20 – after skipping the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meeting in Korea as well as the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30) in Brazil – would be “another opportunity for China”, Rosemary Foot, professor of politics and international relations at the University of Oxford, told Al Jazeera.

“It can contrast, yet again, its declared commitment to multilateralism and responsible behaviour as a major state versus the dangers of a unilateralist America focusing not on public goods but on benefits to itself only.”

China has been looking to expand its influence in Africa as a counterweight to the US-led world order. In stark contrast to Trump’s decision to end Africa’s duty-free era and slap 15-30 percent tariffs on 22 nations, Xi announced at the APEC summit last month a zero-tariff policy for all African nations with diplomatic ties to Beijing.

On that occasion, Xi emphasised China’s commitment “to joint development and shared prosperity with all countries”, stressing the country’s goal to “support more developing countries in achieving modernisation and opening up new avenues for global development”.

Similarly, Li, China’s premier, marked the United Nations’ 80th anniversary at the General Assembly in September by expressing the need for stronger collective action on climate change and emerging technologies, calling for greater solidarity to “[lift] everyone up, while division drags all down”.

His remarks were in stark contrast to Trump’s, who, in his speech, described climate change as the “greatest con job ever perpetrated” and called renewable sources of energy a “joke” and “pathetic”.