Two bid-rigging syndicates potentially linked to Tai Po fire estate

Hong Kong's Competition Commission has not ruled out links between at least two bid-rigging syndicates and renovations at Wang Fuk Court, the Tai Po estate destroyed in a fire. Executive director for legal services Lester Lee Hiu-leung told a judge-led committee on Thursday that law enforcement agencies will probe potential fraud in residents' selection of the HK$336 million Prestige proposal, the priciest among 57 bids.

On Thursday, Lester Lee Hiu-leung, the Competition Commission’s executive director for legal services, told a judge-led committee investigating the Wang Fuk Court fire that the watchdog has not ruled out links between at least two bid-rigging syndicates and the renovation project at the Tai Po estate. Will Power Architects Company served as consultant and Prestige Construction and Engineering as contractor for the works, with residents selecting Prestige's HK$336 million proposal—the most expensive among 57 options—prior to the blaze. Lee said law enforcement agencies would investigate whether anyone committed fraud by inducing residents to choose that bid. The commission has also not ruled out seeking damages from Will Power and Prestige via the Competition Tribunal. He noted that while the Wang Fuk Court project was included in a formal complaint filed to the tribunal on Wednesday—involving eight companies and 12 individuals across 11 housing estates and buildings—Will Power and Prestige were not named in it. “We hope the public will be patient with us,” Lee told the hearing.

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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.

On the second day of evidential hearings into Hong Kong's deadliest fire at Wang Fuk Court, Tai Po, senior counsel Victor Dawes revealed how residents were misled into selecting a convicted contractor amid widespread bid-rigging and corruption in construction tenders.

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Bid-rigging practices are back in the spotlight following a deadly blaze in Tai Po, but how widespread is the problem in Hong Kong's building maintenance sector and how do syndicates operate?

Hong Kong's newly elected lawmakers will discuss a government motion to strengthen support for residents affected by the Wang Fuk Court fire at their first chamber meeting next Wednesday, but will skip a regular question session for officials. The meeting will also debate a lawmaker's motion calling for a review of the city's building maintenance system and a crackdown on bid rigging in renovation projects. Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu will give an opening speech.

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In response to a recent fire in Tai Po, Hong Kong's government is reforming the Urban Renewal Authority's 'Smart Tender' scheme with homeowner satisfaction surveys to combat bid-rigging and improve building maintenance. Chief Secretary Eric Chan Kwok-ki announced plans for a preselected list of qualified contractors, with poor performers facing removal after investigations.

Hong Kong's independent committee into the deadly Tai Po fire held its first hearing on Thursday at 10am, starting with a minute of silence for the victims. Residents have urged the panel to hold those responsible accountable, as the judge leading the inquiry promises a fair and thorough probe.

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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.

 

 

 

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