Hong Kong Fire Death Toll Climbs to 83 as Rescue Efforts Turn to Recovery
The death toll from the devastating high-rise fire at the Wang Fuk Court complex in Hong Kong’s Tai Po district has climbed to 83, authorities confirmed late Thursday, cementing the tragedy as the deadliest building fire in the city’s modern history. The sharp rise in casualties comes as firefighters and rescue teams finally gained access to the upper floors of the charred residential towers, discovering dozens of bodies trapped in stairwells and sealed units.
The Fire Services Department announced the grim update in a press briefing, revealing that 28 more victims were located during the final sweep of the most severely damaged blocks. Additionally, several critically injured residents who had been rushed to Prince of Wales and Alice Ho Miu Ling Nethersole hospitals succumbed to severe burns and smoke inhalation.
“We are witnessing a tragedy of unprecedented scale,” said a department spokesperson. “The intensity of the heat and the density of the toxic smoke left many residents with no escape route.”
The inferno, which began on Wednesday amid ongoing renovation works, turned the residential complex into a towering smokestack. Investigations have already pointed to gross negligence, with police arresting three individuals connected to the construction firm responsible for the site. Preliminary reports suggest that fire doors were propped open and emergency exits were blocked by scaffolding materials, creating a “chimney effect” that funneled lethal gases through the building’s escape routes.
Chief Executive John Lee, who visited the site earlier today, pledged a “thorough and unflinching” inquiry into the disaster. “We will find out who is responsible, and they will face the full weight of the law,” Lee stated, visibly moved by the scale of the loss. The government has announced a city-wide day of mourning, with flags to be flown at half-mast across the territory.
The disaster has now far surpassed the death toll of the 1996 Garley Building fire, which killed 41 people and had previously stood as Hong Kong’s worst peacetime fire. As the recovery operation winds down, the focus is shifting to identification, a process made difficult by the severity of the burns sustained by many victims. For a city defined by its vertical living, the Wang Fuk Court fire has sparked a crisis of confidence in the safety of its aging public housing estates.


