Authorities link blaze at Wang Fuk Court to substandard renovation materials as death toll hits 151
Hong Kong police announced on Monday they have arrested 13 people suspected of manslaughter in connection with last week’s devastating fire at the Wang Fuk Court housing estate — the city’s deadliest residential blaze in decades.
Investigators said the fire, which has claimed at least 151 lives, spread rapidly after flammable renovation materials and non-compliant netting were used on the buildings’ bamboo scaffolding.
The arrests include directors and an engineering consultant associated with the company responsible for the ongoing renovation work.
Authorities revealed that tests on green mesh used outside several of the high-rise towers failed fire-retardant standards, and a number of fire alarms reportedly did not function during the blaze.
Search teams continue to sweep the seven towers that were engulfed, with bodies recovered from stairwells, rooftops and inside apartments.
Police warned that some remains have been reduced to ash, meaning some missing residents may never be found.
More than forty people remain unaccounted for.
Government and anti-corruption officials said the netting and foam insulation used during the renovation had been installed in areas difficult to inspect, apparently to save costs — a decision now being framed as a “shameful act” by those responsible.
The collapse of what should have been basic safety standards has prompted widespread public outrage, intensified by revelations that residents had previously raised fire-risk concerns which were reportedly dismissed as “relatively low.”
Displaced survivors — numbering in the thousands — have been rehoused and provided financial aid and assistance replacing lost documents.
A citywide mourning period has begun, with vigils and public memorials underway as communities grapple with the scale of loss.
Authorities say their investigation remains ongoing, and further arrests are possible as they seek to hold accountable all individuals whose negligence may have contributed to the tragedy.
Investigators said the fire, which has claimed at least 151 lives, spread rapidly after flammable renovation materials and non-compliant netting were used on the buildings’ bamboo scaffolding.
The arrests include directors and an engineering consultant associated with the company responsible for the ongoing renovation work.
Authorities revealed that tests on green mesh used outside several of the high-rise towers failed fire-retardant standards, and a number of fire alarms reportedly did not function during the blaze.
Search teams continue to sweep the seven towers that were engulfed, with bodies recovered from stairwells, rooftops and inside apartments.
Police warned that some remains have been reduced to ash, meaning some missing residents may never be found.
More than forty people remain unaccounted for.
Government and anti-corruption officials said the netting and foam insulation used during the renovation had been installed in areas difficult to inspect, apparently to save costs — a decision now being framed as a “shameful act” by those responsible.
The collapse of what should have been basic safety standards has prompted widespread public outrage, intensified by revelations that residents had previously raised fire-risk concerns which were reportedly dismissed as “relatively low.”
Displaced survivors — numbering in the thousands — have been rehoused and provided financial aid and assistance replacing lost documents.
A citywide mourning period has begun, with vigils and public memorials underway as communities grapple with the scale of loss.
Authorities say their investigation remains ongoing, and further arrests are possible as they seek to hold accountable all individuals whose negligence may have contributed to the tragedy.




























