New Delhi: India is sending a team of burn doctors and nurses to Dhaka to treat victims of Monday’s fighter jet crash that has killed at least 31 people and injured 165 others.The team will also assess patients’ condition and recommend that they receive further treatment and specialised care in India as necessary, the external affairs ministry said on Tuesday (July 22). More teams may travel to Dhaka based on information from preliminary assessments, it added.A Bangladesh air force pilot flying a trainer fighter aircraft crashed into a Dhaka school early Monday afternoon.At least 31 people, including 25 children and the aircraft’s pilot, were killed, while another 165 were injured, Bangladesh’s national news agency BSS cited the military as saying.The Chinese F7-BGI aircraft involved had “suffered a technical glitch”, the details of which will be revealed following an investigation, per Bangladesh’s military.Meanwhile, protests erupted in Dhaka over the crash on Tuesday, with students clashing with security personnel near the site of crash in the city’s Uttara neighbourhood as well as outside the national secretariat, where they were lathi-charged and tear-gassed.Students from the affected school – the Milestone School and College – as well as other institutions made a number of demands of the administration, including accurate lists of the deceased and injured, compensation to the families of the deceased, a decommissioning of older aircraft and that the air force adopt safer training procedures.They also asked for an apology for the alleged manhandling by security personnel of students and teachers at the site of the crash.Chief adviser Muhammad Yunus, who heads Bangladesh’s interim government that took over following former premier Sheikh Hasina’s violent ouster nearly a year ago, said in a statement that all of the students’ demands were “reasonable”.Yunus referred to law adviser Asif Nazrul’s remarks after a meeting with students at the Milestone School on Tuesday, including that information on the deceased and injured is being updated from an ‘information centre’ at the site and that arrangements were being made for compensation and support to those affected.The government also regretted the allegations that army personnel beat students at the school while conducting crowd control work and will inform army authorities to take appropriate action, Yunus cited Nazrul as saying. The law adviser also said that the air force will be instructed not to operate training aircraft over populated areas.Nazrul, education adviser C.R. Abrar and Yunus’s press secretary Shafiqul Alam were also trapped inside the Milestone campus for nine hours on Tuesday as protesting students blocked their exit.Having arrived there at 10:30 am, they were able to exit under police protection only shortly after 7:30 pm, per local media.