Photorealistic image of Wang Fuk Court fire victims receiving extended rental aid from Hong Kong officials amid rehousing doubts.
Photorealistic image of Wang Fuk Court fire victims receiving extended rental aid from Hong Kong officials amid rehousing doubts.
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Hong Kong extends rental aid for Wang Fuk Court fire victims amid rehousing doubts

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Victims of Hong Kong's deadly Wang Fuk Court fire will keep receiving HK$150,000 annual rental subsidies until rehoused—even if it takes 2½ years—Deputy Financial Secretary Michael Wong Wai-lun confirmed, as the HK$6.8 billion buyback plan faces concerns over flat allocation fairness.

Deputy Financial Secretary Michael Wong Wai-lun clarified on Monday that Wang Fuk Court fire victims in transitional housing will continue receiving the HK$150,000 annual rental subsidy until they secure exchange flats, potentially for up to 2½ years. This comes amid the government's HK$6.8 billion plan—announced Saturday—to buy back damaged units, funded by HK$2.8 billion from a support fund and HK$4 billion public money.

Owners can opt for cash buyouts at HK$8,000–HK$10,500 per square foot or flat-for-flat exchanges in 10 Housing Authority/Society projects. Wong, on a radio show, urged owners to decide wisely by August 31 (with priority for June 30 provisional agreements), warning legislative acquisition would yield lower payouts. He called it a compassionate, one-off measure without precedent.

Residents remain skeptical about the allocation process. A 40-year-old resident surnamed Fong questioned the 'blind commitment' in provisional agreements: "How can we sign before knowing what flats we get? If unsatisfied, will alternatives be offered?" Fears include smaller homes or being priced out of the market post-cash buyout. Clearer allocation details are demanded.

Qué dice la gente

Reactions on X to the Wang Fuk Court fire include neutral reports on the HK$6.8 billion buyback plan and rental subsidy extensions, positive notes on higher compensation, but skepticism over no residential rebuild on site, unfair flat allocation, long-term rehousing delays, and government accountability.

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Illustration of Hong Kong fire victims at Wang Fuk Court receiving HK$100,000 subsidies amid damaged buildings and a HK$3.4 billion aid fund announcement.
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