By Johan Purnomo
SIDOARJO, Indonesia (Reuters) -The anxiety gripped Jayanti Mandasari as soon as she got off the phone with her son M. Muhfi Alfian on Monday.
A generous boy, he had called to ask for money to treat his friends to some snacks. Despite the light-hearted nature of the call, she could not shake off her unexplained fears.
Those fears were confirmed when a younger sibling told her the Islamic boarding school Alfian attended, Al Khoziny, had collapsed during afternoon prayers, killing at least five people and trapping dozens of students and several workers in the rubble.
About 60 people, including Alfian, who has not been declared dead by officials, remained trapped under the remains of the school in the East Java town of Sidoarjo, located about 660 km (410 miles) east of the