Multiple explosions shake a mosque in an Indonesian high school and
injure 54
[November 08, 2025]
By NINIEK KARMINI
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Indonesian authorities said Friday they have
identified a 17-year-old boy as the suspect in an attack that shook a
mosque at a high school in the capital, Jakarta, injuring at least 54
people, mostly students.
Witnesses told local television stations that they heard at least two
loud blasts around midday, just as the sermon had started at Friday
prayers, from inside and outside the mosque at SMA 72, a state high
school within a navy compound in Jakarta’s northern Kelapa Gading
neighborhood.
Students and others ran out in panic as gray smoke filled the mosque.
Police said they had recovered a toy submachine gun belonging to the
suspect and inscribed with what appeared to be white supremacist
slogans. However, they brushed away speculation that the blasts were a
terror attack.
“The suspect is a 17-year-old male student” who was undergoing surgery,
Deputy House Speaker Sufmi Dasco Ahmad told reporters after visiting
victims at a hospital. He gave no more details.
National Police Chief Listyo Sigit said the suspect was one of two
students having surgery for injuries from the blasts.
“Our personnel are currently conducting an in-depth investigation to
determine the suspect's identity and the environment where he lives,
including his house and others," Sigit told a news conference at the
presidential palace in Jakarta.

References to Christchurch attack
Sigit said investigators are still collecting information to determine a
motive, including how the suspect was able to assemble a toy submachine
gun with words inscribed on it including “14 words. For Agartha,” and
“Brenton Tarrant: Welcome to hell."
“14 words” is generally a reference to a white supremacist slogan, while
Brenton Tarrant is the perpetrator of a 2019 mass shooting at a mosque
and Islamic center in Christchurch, New Zealand, that killed 51 and
injured dozens of others.
“We discovered the weapon was a toy gun with specific markings, which we
are also investigating to understand the motive, including how he
assembled it and carried out the attack,” Sigit said.
Most of the victims suffered burns and injuries from flying glass. The
type of explosives used was not immediately known but the blasts came
from near the mosque’s loudspeaker, according to Jakarta Police Chief
Asep Edi Suheri.
He warned against speculation that the incident was a terror attack
before the police investigation is completed.
Police confirmed they were looking into reports in local media that the
suspect was a grade 12 student who had been bullied and wanted revenge
by carrying out what was intended to be a suicide attack.

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Curious onlookers look on as military personnel stand guard near a
school where explosions reportedly occurred, in Jakarta, Indonesia,
Friday, Nov. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara)

“We are still investigating the possibility that bullying was a
factor that motivated the suspect to carry out the attack," Jakarta
Police's spokesperson Budi Hermanto told reporters late Friday.
“There are several obstacles in obtaining information from witnesses
as they are also victims who need medical treatment to recover,”
Hermanto said, adding that authorities are providing “trauma
healing” for students and teachers.
He revised the number of people injured to 54 instead of 55 as
police said earlier, saying most of the victims were standing close
to the loudspeaker and suffered hearing loss from the blasts inside
the mosque. About 33 students remain hospitalized in two hospitals
for burns and wounds from blast fragments.
Hermanto said the capital is safe and security is under control, and
he urged people not to be anxious.
Families gather at hospitals
Videos circulating on social media showed dozens of students in
school uniform running in panic across the school's basketball
court, some covering their ears with their hands, apparently to
protect themselves from the blasts.
Some of the injured were carried on stretchers to waiting cars.
Shocked relatives gathered at centers set up at Yarsi and Cempaka
Putih hospitals to seek information about their loved ones. Parents
told television stations their children had wounds from being hit in
the head, feet and hands by sharp nails and pieces of exploding
objects.
Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country, was
struck by a major militant attack in 2002 when al-Qaida staged
bombings on the resort island of Bali that killed 202 people, mostly
foreign tourists.
In subsequent years, there have been mostly smaller, less deadly
strikes that have targeted the government, police and anti-terrorism
forces, as well as those considered infidels by militant groups.
Friday's attack was not the first mosque attack. In 2011, a Muslim
militant blew himself up in a mosque at a police compound in Cirebon
packed with officers during Friday prayers, injuring 30 people.
In December 2022, a Muslim militant and convicted bombmaker who was
released from prison the previous year blew himself up at a police
station in West Java, killing an officer and wounding 11 people.
Since 2023, the Southeast Asian nation has experienced what
authorities call a “zero attack phenomenon.” Security experts say
the government is responsible for the stable situation.
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