Hong Kong experts say building reform pledges fall short after deadly fire

After a deadly fire in Tai Po that claimed 168 lives, Hong Kong's government has proposed measures to strengthen building maintenance. Experts, however, warn that these pledges only scratch the surface of long-standing systemic issues in the sector.

In November, a blaze broke out during renovation works at Wang Fuk Court, a subsidised housing estate in Tai Po, killing 168 people—the city's deadliest fire in seven decades. The inferno laid bare entrenched problems in Hong Kong's building sector.

On Wednesday, at the first Legislative Council meeting of the year, officials unveiled proposals to close policy gaps, including requiring service providers seeking contracts to undergo background checks by police and the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC), as well as screening for criminal and disciplinary records to qualify for a government platform.

While industry leaders described the measures as a step in the right direction, they cautioned that “the devil is in the detail,” with the proposals existing only as a framework lacking specifics. Lawmaker and town planner Andrew Lam Siu-lo said: “The proposed screening process must specify which criminal and disciplinary records are to be considered, and whether professional misconduct that stops short of a criminal offence will be included.”

Experts and industry figures argue that deeper systemic reforms and tougher laws are needed to address issues like bid-rigging and loopholes. Organisations such as the Hong Kong Institute of Construction Managers and the Hong Kong Institute of Building Safety stress that the Minor Works Control System and Buildings Ordinance require further strengthening.

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Illustration of the catastrophic fire at Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po, Hong Kong, engulfing seven blocks and claiming at least 159 lives.
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Hong Kong's Tai Po estate fire kills at least 159

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A 43-hour blaze on November 26 devastated seven blocks at Hong Kong's Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po, killing at least 159 people and injuring 79. Preliminary investigations point to scaffolding between the first and second floors of one block as the likely starting point. As of December 7, 13 households remain uncontacted, with authorities not ruling out further deaths.

Following the deadly November 26 Tai Po fire that killed 161 and displaced 5,000 at Wang Fuk Court, Hong Kong's Secretary for Development Bernadette Linn Hon-ho pledged stricter building safety laws, vowing no leniency for construction sector loopholes and government takeover of risky renovations.

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Un legislador de Hong Kong advirtió que las propuestas del gobierno para aumentar el escrutinio profesional en proyectos de mantenimiento de edificios podrían generar costos adicionales y retrasos. El legislador del Comité Electoral Andrew Lam Siu-lo pidió discusiones más profundas sobre los detalles de implementación por parte del gobierno y la legislatura. Las medidas responden al mortal incendio de Tai Po a finales de noviembre.

En el segundo día de audiencias probatorias sobre el incendio más mortífero de Hong Kong, celebradas en el Tribunal de Wang Fuk, Tai Po, el abogado Victor Dawes reveló cómo se engañó a los residentes para que eligieran a un contratista condenado, en un contexto de fraude y corrupción generalizados en las licitaciones de construcción.

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Amid ongoing fallout from November's deadly Tai Po fire—which claimed over 160 lives and displaced thousands—Hong Kong residents are pushing for a class-action lawsuit mechanism, but long-delayed legal reforms are standing in the way, as covered in prior reports on government safety pledges.

Las políticas de Hong Kong, desde la reurbanización de Tai Po hasta las medidas contra el amaño de licitaciones, parecen haberse diseñado con escasa participación legislativa. La exlegisladora y veterana sindicalista Chan Yuen-han calificó de irresponsable que los funcionarios ofrezcan una opción que podría tomar una década, describiendo los largos plazos de reconstrucción de la ciudad como una broma y una señal de que no ha seguido el ritmo del continente. Otras voces han instado al gobierno a no descartar esta opción más desafiante y que consume más tiempo.

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Tras el mortal incendio de Wang Fuk Court, el subsecretario de Finanzas de Hong Kong, Michael Wong Wai-lun, ha detallado opciones de reasentamiento, incluyendo la construcción de pisos subvencionados en Tai Po, priorizando la opinión de los residentes.

 

 

 

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