Hong Kong apartment fire – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Wed, 10 Jun 2026 08:13:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Hong Kong apartment fire – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Hong Kong charges seven people, two firms over deadliest fire in decades https://artifex.news/article71083765-ece/ Wed, 10 Jun 2026 08:13:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article71083765-ece/ Read More “Hong Kong charges seven people, two firms over deadliest fire in decades” »

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Flames and thick smoke rise from multiple residential blocks at the Wang Fuk Court housing complex during a deadly fire, in Tai Po, Hong Kong, China, November 26, 2025.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Hong Kong authorities charged seven people and two companies on Wednesday (June 10, 2026) over the world’s deadliest residential building fire in decades, which killed 168 people at a public housing estate last year.

Hong Kong’s deadliest fire: Probe begins evidence hearings

The massive blaze, which engulfed seven of the eight high-rise apartment blocks at the Wang Fuk Court estate in November, prompted a months-long investigation in to the cause. Public hearings were told that almost all life-saving fire safety measures had failed on the day of the blaze because of human errors.

Hong Kong blaze: Why buildings have disastrous fires and how they can be prevented

Authorities “today charged seven individuals and two companies with 25 counts of offences, including manslaughter, conspiracy to defraud, ‘money-laundering’, attempting to pervert the course of public justice, and tax evasion”, the government said in a statement on Wednesday (June 10, 2026).

The seven people charged included directors and inspectors of a consultancy firm involved in the estate’s renovation, as well as the main contractor involved in the project, according to the statement. Substandard construction safety netting and cigarette butts were focal points of the probe into the causes and rapid spread of the world’s deadliest residential building fire since 1980.

Fire alarm systems for seven of eight blocks had also been deactivated, which “greatly shortened the time for residents to evacuate”, leading counsel Victor Dawes had told an independent committee conducting the probe. Required fire-retardant nets were not used in many places, and the windows were covered by foam boards, which may have contributed to the spread of fire into the flats, the panel heard earlier this year.

The Fire Investigation Task Force had maintained that an ignited cigarette caused combustible material to catch fire, sparking the blaze. Thousands of residents lost their homes in the blaze and relocated into temporary housing.



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Hong Kong races to remove scaffolding nets blamed for fuelling deadly fire https://artifex.news/article70356341-ece/ Thu, 04 Dec 2025 06:20:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70356341-ece/ Read More “Hong Kong races to remove scaffolding nets blamed for fuelling deadly fire” »

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Hong Kong authorities rushed on Thursday (December 4, 2025) to remove mesh netting on all buildings undergoing renovation across the city after the material was blamed for fanning a blaze last week that has killed at least 159 people.

The Government late on Wednesday (December 3, 2025) ordered the immediate removal of scaffolding nets on all public and private residential buildings by Saturday (November 29, 2025), to “protect public safety and put residents and businesses’ minds at ease”.

The move comes as authorities investigate the cause of the city’s deadliest fire in decades, having pointed to the mesh for fuelling an inferno that engulfed seven high-rise apartment blocks at the Wang Fuk Court complex on November 26.

Renovation work across the financial hub will effectively grind to a standstill for an undefined period of time as inspectors verify the netting meets safety standards.

At a housing estate in Sha Tin, around 15 minutes drive from the Wang Fuk complex, workers began dismantling protective netting on Thursday (December 4, 2025) morning.

C.K. Lau, an 82 year old retiree living at the Sha Tin housing estate, said removing the nets reduced the chance of a similar type of incident.

“The residents feel better if they (the Government) agree to take it down. So they agreed to take it down within this week.”

Police have arrested a total of 21 people in their probe into the fire.

Among them are 15 from various construction companies suspected of manslaughter, including two directors and an engineering consultant from Prestige Construction, the main contractor at Wang Fuk Court.

A further six from the fire service installation contractor have been arrested on suspicion of fraud.

Authorities said substandard plastic mesh and insulation foam used during renovation work at the doomed estate likely fuelled the 40-hour inferno, while fire alarms were also not operating properly.

Residents of Wang Fuk Court, home to 4,600 people, were told by authorities last year they faced “relatively low fire risks” after they complained about fire hazards posed by the renovations, the city’s Labour Department said.

In response to calls for transparency and accountability, city leader John Lee has also ordered a judge-led committee to investigate the fire and review oversight of building renovations.

Contractors to bear cost of removal

More than 200 private buildings, along with more than 10 public housing and Government buildings, will have to remove the netting, Development Secretary Bernadette Linn said on Wednesday (December 3), adding that contractors must bear the costs.

Hong Kong’s building department aims to issue a new code of practice next week, requiring all scaffold net materials to be sampled on site. The nets will only be installed after being certified by designated laboratories as compliant with relevant requirements.

Authorities are also investigating suspected false safety documents for netting from a Shandong, China-based manufacturer used at two renovation sites in the city.

Prestige, the main contractor at Wang Fuk Court, was involved in renovations work at one of those sites, according to authorities and notices at the site seen by Reuters.

Prestige did not respond to calls and letters left at their shuttered offices.

Of the 159 bodies found since the Wang Fuk Court blaze, authorities say 140 have been identified – 91 females and 49 males, aged between one and 97 years.

Foreign domestic helpers from Indonesia and the Philippines are among 31 people still missing.

More than 2,900 residents have been put in temporary accommodation, the Government said, with 1,152 staying in hostels, camps or hotel rooms. Another 1,765 residents have moved into transitional housing units.

Published – December 04, 2025 11:50 am IST



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