Wang Fuk Court blaze the deadliest in decades — substandard scaffolding nets and disabled fire alarms under investigation
The death toll from the devastating fire at the high-rise residential complex in northern Hong Kong has risen to 159, authorities confirmed on Wednesday.
The victims range in age from a 1-year-old child to a 97-year-old elder, underscoring the tragedy’s sweeping human cost.
Police said the discovery of bodies now concludes the search inside all seven damaged towers.
Still, crews continue sifting through debris — including collapsed bamboo scaffolding — in case remains are buried beneath.
About 30 people remain missing, some presumed lost among the densely packed rubble.
Officials have arrested six individuals from a fire-services installation contractor, accusing them of deactivating fire alarms during renovation work and misleading investigators.
Earlier, anti-corruption agents detained additional persons linked to the renovation, including company directors, as part of a broader probe into negligence and possible graft.
Preliminary findings implicate unsafe construction practices: some of the green safety nets wrapped around the buildings used substandard, highly flammable materials, and foam-panel window coverings are believed to have accelerated the blaze.
Investigators revealed that re-inspections of similar scaffolding materials across the city flagged compliance failures — prompting the government to order the immediate removal of all external nets on ongoing renovation sites until safety standards can be verified.
The fire, which erupted at Wang Fuk Court on November 26 during a major external-wall renovation, spread rapidly between seven of the eight towers.
The incident has triggered a sweeping safety crackdown.
Residents displaced by the tragedy are being relocated to emergency housing, while authorities have pledged a full, judge-led inquiry into systemic failures.
The scale of the disaster — the deadliest residential blaze in Hong Kong in decades — has fuelled public outrage over building-safety enforcement and sparked calls for accountability in construction regulation and oversight.
The victims range in age from a 1-year-old child to a 97-year-old elder, underscoring the tragedy’s sweeping human cost.
Police said the discovery of bodies now concludes the search inside all seven damaged towers.
Still, crews continue sifting through debris — including collapsed bamboo scaffolding — in case remains are buried beneath.
About 30 people remain missing, some presumed lost among the densely packed rubble.
Officials have arrested six individuals from a fire-services installation contractor, accusing them of deactivating fire alarms during renovation work and misleading investigators.
Earlier, anti-corruption agents detained additional persons linked to the renovation, including company directors, as part of a broader probe into negligence and possible graft.
Preliminary findings implicate unsafe construction practices: some of the green safety nets wrapped around the buildings used substandard, highly flammable materials, and foam-panel window coverings are believed to have accelerated the blaze.
Investigators revealed that re-inspections of similar scaffolding materials across the city flagged compliance failures — prompting the government to order the immediate removal of all external nets on ongoing renovation sites until safety standards can be verified.
The fire, which erupted at Wang Fuk Court on November 26 during a major external-wall renovation, spread rapidly between seven of the eight towers.
The incident has triggered a sweeping safety crackdown.
Residents displaced by the tragedy are being relocated to emergency housing, while authorities have pledged a full, judge-led inquiry into systemic failures.
The scale of the disaster — the deadliest residential blaze in Hong Kong in decades — has fuelled public outrage over building-safety enforcement and sparked calls for accountability in construction regulation and oversight.




























