What we know so far:

  • 36 people, including a firefighter, have died. Some 279 are still missing

  • 29 have been hospitalised, seven in a critical condition

  • The eight residential blocks in the estate had been undergoing renovations since July 2024, sheathed in bamboo scaffolding and green mesh

  • Authorities say the rapid spread of fire was “unusual”, with styrofoam material found in buildings

  • Government will launch investigations, including criminal probes, to find cause of deadly blaze

  • Blazes in three of the seven buildings were brought under control by early morning, after nearly 10 hours. Four more are still engulfed in flames

  • Chief Executive John Lee has described the fire as a “massive catastrophe”

  • 900 people are seeking refuge in community halls

  • Electioneering activities have been suspended ahead of December 7 election

  • Lee says he will review if there is a need to postpone the election

Thirty-six people have been killed and 279 others are missing after a ferocious blaze ravaged a housing estate in Hong Kong’s Tai Po neighbourhood, as scorching flames ripped through bamboo scaffolding on seven residential blocks.

Another 29 people have been hospitalised, with seven in a critical condition, Chief Executive John Lee revealed in an early Thursday morning press conference at Prince of Wales Hospital in Sha Tin.

Earlier, President Xi Jinping expressed his condolences in a late-evening statement and called for “all-out efforts” to minimise casualties and losses, according to state broadcaster CCTV.

The fire was first reported at 2.51pm on Wednesday and soon, huge plumes of dark smoke billowed high into the sky at the scene at Wang Fuk Court, with the flames quickly spreading to seven out of eight blocks in the estate.

Police said that they had received multiple reports of people trapped in a building where the blaze started, with a man and a woman reportedly unconscious and suffering from burns.

The blaze was initially classified as a No 1 alarm fire but was quickly raised to No 4 by 3.34pm and then to the top-level No 5 at 6.22pm. In Hong Kong, fires are rated on a scale of one to five, with higher numbers indicating greater severity.

Footage from the scene shows bamboo scaffolding outside several flats of the building engulfed in flames, with burning sections of green scaffolding mesh falling to the ground.

  • built_on_hope [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    5 days ago

    I used to live in the UK but left before the final reports came out. What remedies did they recommend in the end? Was anyone ever held accountable?

    • save_vs_death [they/them]@hexbear.net
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      5 days ago

      yeah, some time in 2023 some of the responsible parties including the cladding company and three central government departments reached a settlement with 900 people, for about £150 million; other than that, a bunch of finger pointing at the fire brigade and absolutely everyone else when the easy answer of “everyone that did this hackjob is breaking rocks on the isle of mann” was right there

      • built_on_hope [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        5 days ago

        Wasn’t expecting much but jeez. At least make the tiniest effort to seem like our “civilised” society punishes the kind of neglect that burns a bunch of people to death