‘This was preventable’: Anger grows in Hong Kong as fire kills at least 94

Hong Kong is reeling from its most catastrophic fire in over six decades as a devastating blaze at Wang Fuk Court subsidized housing estate claimed at least 94 lives, with dozens more critically injured and nearly 300 residents still unaccounted for. The inferno, which raged for more than 24 hours across seven 31-story towers, has exposed critical safety failures and sparked widespread public fury.

Authorities have identified substandard construction materials—including flammable mesh netting and plastic sheets installed during renovation—as primary factors in the rapid spread of flames. The tragedy has been labeled a ‘man-made disaster’ by outraged citizens, with three renovation supervisors already arrested on manslaughter charges and a corruption investigation underway.

Resident testimonies reveal alarming safety oversights: fire alarms were deliberately disabled during construction to accommodate workers’ use of emergency exits, while residents repeatedly voiced concerns about workers smoking near combustible materials. Kiko Ma, a Canadian-based apartment owner, stated, ‘This was preventable… A lot of people did not do their duties,’ citing the use of poor-quality flammable materials by contractors.

The 1980s-era complex housed approximately 4,600 residents, nearly 40% of whom were seniors aged 65 or older. Firefighters faced extreme challenges including intense heat, collapsing bamboo scaffolding, and cramped living spaces averaging just 14.1 square meters per household—characteristic of Hong Kong’s densely packed urban housing.

In the aftermath, hundreds of survivors have been relocated to temporary shelters as emergency housing allocations proceed. The disaster has ignited scrutiny over systemic safety compromises, with residents revealing that earlier concerns about renovation costs and management transparency were systematically ignored. This incident follows a pattern of construction fires, including a recent bamboo scaffold fire in Hong Kong’s Central district, raising questions about institutional prioritization of cost efficiency over safety.

In response, Hong Kong authorities have ordered immediate inspections of all major renovation projects, focusing on scaffolding safety and material compliance. The tragedy has become a catalyst for demanding accountability and reform in the city’s aging public housing infrastructure.