Fourteen children died after the roof of a private tuition centre in Lahore's Kahna area collapsed on Tuesday, June 30, 2026 [1].

The disaster highlights critical safety failures in unregulated educational spaces and the dangers of operating businesses in buildings under active construction.

The collapse occurred while classes were in session [2]. Authorities said the building was under construction or renovation at the time of the structural failure [1]. The sudden cave-in trapped students and staff beneath debris in the suburb of Lahore [3].

Casualty reports vary across sources. One report said that 20 people were injured [3]. Another report specified that one teacher and eight other children were injured [4]. All victims were transported to local medical facilities for treatment.

Lahore police have since registered a case against the owners of the tuition centre and the contractor responsible for the work [1]. The investigation is focusing on whether the building met safety codes, and why classes were permitted in a structure undergoing construction.

Emergency responders worked to clear the rubble and recover the bodies of the 14 children [1]. The incident has sparked local concern regarding the oversight of private tutoring hubs, which often operate outside the purview of formal school regulations.

Fourteen children died after the roof of a private tuition centre in Lahore's Kahna area collapsed

This tragedy underscores a systemic lack of building code enforcement and safety oversight for private educational facilities in Pakistan. By operating a school within a construction site, the owners bypassed basic safety protocols, turning a learning environment into a high-risk zone. The legal action against the contractor and owners may set a precedent for how the state holds private educators accountable for structural negligence.