Hong Kong’s leader has announced a powerful, judge-led inquiry will investigate the city’s deadliest fire in decades (a tower block inferno that killed at least 156 people) as authorities scramble to contain public outrage over a disaster blamed on substandard materials, lax oversight, and a deadly failure to heed residents’ warnings.
Chief Executive John Lee declared the high-level probe would examine “the reason behind the cause and rapid spreading” of the blaze that engulfed the Wang Fuk Court complex, a tragedy that has exposed catastrophic regulatory failures. The announcement comes as police continue a massive criminal investigation, having arrested 15 people for manslaughter and 12 more in a separate corruption probe, revealing a web of potential negligence and graft around the renovation works.

The investigation has already uncovered that residents explicitly warned authorities last year about fire hazards from the renovations, only to be told they faced “relatively low fire risks.” Officials now confirm the contractors used flammable plastic mesh and foam insulation that failed fire-retardant tests, effectively hiding the dangerous materials in hard-to-reach areas during inspections.
Why It Matters
This judge-led inquiry isn’t just about finding causes—it’s a political firebreak. The government is deploying its most formal investigative tool to contain a public relations inferno that threatens to burn its credibility to the ground. That residents’ explicit warnings were dismissed as “low risk” reveals a bureaucracy so complacent it ignored the very people it was supposed to protect.
















