Hong Kong’s deadliest blaze in decades kills at least 94, scores missing

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People shelter at an evacuation center on Thursday, after a deadly fire broke out at Wang Fuk Court housing complex, in Hong Kong. (Reuters)
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Smoke rises from apartments after a major fire swept through several blocks at the Wang Fuk Court residential estate in Hong Kong's Tai Po district on Thursday. (AFP)
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An apartment still smoulders after a major fire swept through several apartment blocks at the Wang Fuk Court residential estate in Hong Kong's Tai Po district, Hong Kong. (AFP)
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A plane flies overhead as smoke rises from a deadly fire, which broke out yesterday at Wang Fuk Court housing complex, in Hong Kong, China November 27, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 28 November 2025
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Hong Kong’s deadliest blaze in decades kills at least 94, scores missing

  • Fire contained to four of the sprawling complex’s almost 2,000 units, more than 36 hours after the blaze broke out on the eight-building estate
  • Anti-corruption body investigating renovation work after police arrest three men on suspicion of negligently leaving foam packaging at the fire site

HONG KONG: Firefighters searched the last of the housing estate flats torched by Hong Kong’s worst fire in decades on Friday, with the death toll rising to at least 94 overnight and scores still missing.
Authorities said the fire had been contained to four of the sprawling complex’s almost 2,000 units, more than 36 hours after the blaze broke out on the eight-building estate.
Firefighters will conduct search and rescue operations in response to 25 remaining requests for help and break into all flats on the estate by 9 am (0100 GMT), said deputy director of fire services Derek Armstrong Chan.

More than 50 people were still hospitalized, with 12 in critical condition and 28 in serious condition. Scores remain missing, although the exact number has not been updated since early Thursday.
“The fire spread so quickly. I saw one hose trying to save several buildings, and I felt it was far too slow,” said a man surnamed Suen.
An AFP reporter at the scene on Friday saw that the fire at Wang Fuk Court had weakened significantly, but sparks and thick smoke still occasionally burst forth from the structure.
Firefighters continued to douse the building with water to cool the structure and prevent embers from re-igniting.
Authorities have begun investigating what sparked the blaze — the financial hub’s worst in almost 80 years — including the presence of bamboo scaffolding and plastic mesh wrapped around the structures as part of a major renovation.




This photograph taken on August 22, 2023 shows a building covered in netting and bamboo scaffolding at the North Point area of the Eastern District in Hong Kong. (AFP)

Hong Kong’s anti-corruption body said Thursday it had launched a probe into renovation work at the complex, hours after police said they had arrested three men on suspicion of negligently leaving foam packaging at the fire site.
Residents of Wang Fuk Court, located in Hong Kong’s northern district of Tai Po, told AFP that they did not hear any fire alarms and had to go door-to-door to alert neighbors to the danger.
“Ringing doorbells, knocking on doors, alerting the neighbors, telling them to leave — that’s what the situation was like,” resident Suen said.

‘Cannot describe it’ 

Of the 94 people confirmed dead as of 6:00 am local time (22:00 GMT Thursday), one was a 37-year-old firefighter and two were Indonesians working as migrant domestic workers.
It is Hong Kong’s deadliest fire since 1948, when an explosion followed by a fire killed at least 135 people.
But the toll could yet rise, with city leader John Lee saying in the early hours of Thursday that 279 people were unaccounted for.
Firefighters said later that they had made contact with some of those people and authorities have not updated the figure since.

On Thursday, police at a nearby community center hoping to identify victims showed photos of bodies pulled from the fire to people seeking missing loved ones.
“If the faces are unrecognizable, there are personal items for people to identify,” said a woman surnamed Cheung who was looking for her relatives.
“I cannot describe my feelings. There were children,” she said.
Deadly fires were once a regular scourge in densely populated Hong Kong, especially in poorer neighborhoods, but improved safety measures have made them far less common.
Hong Kong authorities will immediately inspect all housing estates undergoing major work following the disaster, city leader Lee said Thursday.
The city’s number-two official Eric Chan told a news conference Thursday it was “imperative to expedite the full transition to metal scaffolding.”
Hong Kong’s government said it was setting up a HK$300 million (38.5 million US dollars) fund to help victims of the fire.
City authorities said they had opened nine shelters and were organizing temporary accommodation and emergency funds for those who had lost their homes.
Activities around Hong Kong’s legislative elections, set to take place on December 7, have been suspended.

Hellish scenes 

Sections of charred scaffolding fell from the burning apartment blocks in hellish scenes late on Wednesday, as flames inside apartments sometimes belched out through windows into a night sky that glowed orange.
Fire services said the wind and drifting debris likely spread the fire from one building to another.
Some of the residents in adjacent blocks who had been evacuated as a precaution were allowed back into their homes on Thursday afternoon.
Crowds moved by the tragedy gathered near the complex to organize aid for displaced residents and firefighters, part of a spontaneous effort in a city that has some of the world’s most densely packed and tallest residential blocks.
Volunteers distributed clothes and lunch boxes at the open-air podium of a nearby mall, while a few people gave out flyers with information about missing people.
“It’s truly touching,” said Stone Ngai, 38, one of the organizers of an impromptu aid station.
“The spirit of Hong Kong people is that when one is in trouble, everyone lends support... It shows that Hong Kong people are full of love.”
 


Heavy shelling, explosions spark fear along Pakistan-Afghanistan border 

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Heavy shelling, explosions spark fear along Pakistan-Afghanistan border 

  • Residents fear for their safety amid border clashes
  • 1,500 Afghan families displaced ‌due to heavy shelling and explosions
  • Pakistan denies targeting civilians, says its strikes focus on militants

LAL PUR, Afghanistan/PESHAWAR, Pakistan: People living along Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan said they ​were considering fleeing their homes because of heavy shelling and explosions as fighting between troops from both sides entered a seventh day on Wednesday.
The South Asian allies-turned-foes have engaged in their worst fighting in years following Pakistani airstrikes on major Afghan cities last week, increasing volatility in a region also on edge over US and Israeli strikes on Iran.
Islamabad has said its airstrikes, which have at times directly targeted the Taliban government, are aimed at ending Afghan support for militants carrying out attacks on Pakistan. The Taliban has denied aiding militant groups.

SHELLING ‌STARTS AS VILLAGERS ‌ARE BREAKING RAMADAN FAST
Residents of towns and villages in ​Pakistan’s ‌northwest ⁠said fighting between ​border ⁠forces starts in the evenings, placing their homes in the line of fire, often at sunset when families are breaking their fast in the holy month of Ramadan.
“There is complete silence in the day, but the moment we sit for iftar dinner, the two sides start shelling,” Farid Khan Shinwari from Landi Kotal, a town near the Torkham border crossing, told Reuters.
“We open our fast in extremely difficult situations, as you never know when a shell can hit your house.”
Residents ⁠in the town and nearby villages said there had been heavy ‌shelling and some explosions heard in the past ‌few days, prompting many to flee their homes.
On the other ​side of the border, Afghans shared similar stories ‌of skirmishes and families fleeing their homes.
Hundreds had been displaced to an open ‌dirt field under makeshift tents, while others had no shelter at all. Officials say around 1,500 families have fled their homes.
Fighting along the 2,600-km (1,615-mile) border has ebbed and flowed over the week-long conflict, with both sides saying they have inflicted heavy losses on the other country and gained ground in the fighting.
Reuters ‌has been unable to verify these accounts.

TURKEY HAS OFFERED TO MEDIATE
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif that ⁠Ankara would help ⁠reinstate a ceasefire, the Turkish Presidency said on Tuesday, as other countries that had offered to mediate have since been hit by the conflict in the Gulf.
On Wednesday, both countries reported exchanges of heavy fire, with Afghanistan’s defense ministry saying Taliban forces shot down a Pakistani drone and captured seven border posts.
A spokesperson for the ministry said 110 civilians, including 65 women and children, had been killed since the fighting began and another 123 were wounded. The United Nations mission for Afghanistan has listed 42 deaths so far.
Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar disputed both figures, saying: “Pakistan exercises great care in only targeting terrorists and support infrastructure. No civilian structures have been targeted.”
On Saturday, Pakistan struck “ammunition and critical equipment” at the Bagram air base north ​of Kabul, Tarar said, a key American command ​center through the 20-year Afghan war.