Grim procession as relatives desperately search for loved ones
- [email protected]
- 0
- Posted on
The death toll is already higher than that of the Grenfell Tower fire in London, which killed 72 people in June 2017. It will continue to climb in the coming days as more victims are identified.
Hong Kong authorities confirmed on Friday afternoon that the fire alarm systems in the towers were not working. It is a finding that aligns with reports by survivors that no alarms went off as the fire spread through the complex. The authorities have vowed to take action against those responsible.
By Friday morning, fire crews had mostly extinguished the blaze, which tore through seven of the eight towers in the 2000-unit residential complex in the northern district of Tai Po on Wednesday and raged for nearly two days.
As the heat subsided, teams of firefighters entered the smouldering ruins, their flashlights illuminating blackened, windowless units.
The search-and-rescue mission soon became one focused on recovering bodies, and media crews repositioned their cameras at a side entrance of the complex, where yellow vans were waiting to collect body bags.
Fire and rescue services working on the fire.Credit: Daniel Ceng
A public square near the towers has transformed into a collection hub for donations and a gathering point for survivors, where volunteers hand out food and water and members of the public drop off clothes, bedding and electronics.
Amid the grief, anger is also kindling among Hongkongers as they debate whether this catastrophe – the most deadly fire to affect the city in decades – could have been avoided.
Their attention, and the government’s focus, has homed in on renovation works being undertaken across the towers, which had bamboo scaffolding covered in green mesh erected around the outside, while flammable styrofoam had been used to protect windows.
Search and rescue workers move bodies onto a truck.Credit: Daniel Ceng
Volunteers help distribute donated clothes to affected residents. Credit: Daniel Ceng
The exact cause of the fire is not yet known. Hong Kong authorities have so far arrested three people connected with the construction company on suspicion of manslaughter, and have launched an investigation into whether the mesh and foam acted as an accelerant.
This fire is the realisation of many people’s fears about Hong Kong’s tightly packed housing blocks, where thousands of residents live in cramped apartments in sprawling high-rise towers.
“I am angry and concerned about building safety in Hong Kong. We have many buildings with multi-storeys and that are getting old and need renovations,” says Ada, who asked to use only her first name.
Loading
Her mother escaped the fire, but her brother’s girlfriend, who lived above on the 26th floor of one of the towers, is unaccounted for. Residents made many complaints about the renovations, she says.
“Everyone ignored them. If you want to hold a massive renovation program like the one at this complex, it needs to be properly managed,” she says.
The Hong Kong Labour Department confirmed the existence of complaints, acknowledging in a statement to Bloomberg News that members of the public had raised concerns about “issues relating to the scaffolding” in September 2024. It said it had warned the company doing the renovation about fire hazards just a week ago.
But inspectors had “consistently monitored” the installation of netting wrapped around the towers and found its quality certificate met official fireproof standards, according to the statement.
As he searches for his mother, Wong also wants answers about how this tragedy was allowed to happen.
“Why did the government department approve the use of that material around the outside of the building?”
With Bloomberg
Get a note directly from our foreign correspondents on what’s making headlines around the world. Sign up for our weekly What in the World newsletter.