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Hong Kong Fire Inquiry: Alarm System Too Slow, Could Have Allowed evacuations
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SCMP Economy23.04.2026Crime1 dk okumaChina

Hong Kong Fire Inquiry: Alarm System Too Slow, Could Have Allowed evacuations

Independent committee examining deadly Wang Fuk Court blaze hears that mobile phone alert system would take up to an hour to activate, as five of seven towers caught fire at late stage

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  • An independent committee investigating the deadly November fire at Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po, Hong Kong, heard that the emergency mobile phone alert system would have taken up to an hour to activate and would have offered little help to fire services.
  • The blaze killed 168 people — the deadliest in Hong Kong since 1948 — and displaced nearly 5,000 residents.
  • The inquiry revealed that a property management employee accidentally disabled fire alarms while switching off hosepipes for repairs, and suggested five of seven affected towers caught fire at a late enough stage that evacuation might have been possible.

KI-generierte Zusammenfassung

Warum es wichtig ist

The Wang Fuk Court fire is the deadliest in Hong Kong since 1948, killing 168 people and displacing nearly 5,000 residents. The fire lasted approximately 43 hours and ravaged all but one block of the Tai Po residential complex.

Schriftgröße

An independent committee investigating last year's disaster at Wang Fuk Court was also told on Thursday that the system, which would have triggered a loud, high-pitched alarm on mobile phones, would have offered little help to the Fire Services Department's evacuation efforts, as it would take up to an hour to activate.

The committee was examining failures linked to the deactivation of fire alarms across the eight towers at the Tai Po residential complex when the blaze broke out on November 26 last year.

The inferno that lasted for around 43 hours and ravaged all but one block was the deadliest in Hong Kong since 1948, killing 168 people and displacing nearly 5,000.

The inquiry earlier heard that a property management employee at Wang Fuk Court had switched off the estate's fire hosepipes to facilitate water tank repairs during a HK$336 million (US$43 million) renovation project and inadvertently disabled the fire alarms altogether.

Victor Dawes, the committee's leading counsel, highlighted that five of seven affected towers caught fire at a relatively late stage, suggesting there might have been enough time to evacuate trapped residents.

Worauf zu achten ist

KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten

  • Property management company faces potential legal action and regulatory penalties

    Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten

  • Hong Kong may implement stricter fire safety regulations for residential complexes

    Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten

  • Compensation claims will be filed by victims' families and displaced residents

    Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Wochen

Offene Fragen

  • Who will be held accountable for the fire alarm deactivation?
  • What systemic reforms will be implemented to prevent similar disasters?
  • Could earlier evacuation have saved more lives in the five late-affected towers?

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This article was originally published by SCMP Economy.

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