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Death Toll Rises to 128 in Hong Kong High-Rise Fire

2 articles
2 sources
0% diversity
Updated 29.11.2025
Key Topics & People
Chris Tang *Andy Yeung Hong Kong Joe Chow Wang Fuk Court

Coverage Framing

2
Human Interest(2)
Avg Factuality:90%
Avg Sensationalism:Moderate

Story Timeline

Nov 29 Morning

1 articles|1 sources
high-rise firedeath tollhong kongsurvivorswang fuk court
Human Interest(1)
New York Times - WorldNov 29

Death Toll Rises to 128 in Hong Kong High-Rise Fire

A fire at the Wang Fuk Court apartment complex in Hong Kong's Tai Po district has resulted in 128 deaths as of Friday, November 28, 2025, making it the deadliest fire in decades. Rescue operations have ceased due to dwindling hope of finding survivors, though approximately 200 residents remain unaccounted for and over 70 are hospitalized. Authorities are struggling to identify victims due to severe burns, and DNA testing will be used to expedite the process. The fire, which began on Wednesday afternoon, spread across six of the 32-story towers, and the cause is suspected to be from flammable.

Mixed toneFactual3 sources
Negative

Key Claims

factual

The death toll from the fire rose to 128 on Friday.

— null

statistic

About 200 people were unaccounted for.

— Chris Tang, Hong Kong’s secretary of security

factual

Eight more people were arrested Friday over the blaze.

— null

factual

The fire started on Wednesday afternoon at the complex in the northern district of Tai Po.

— null

factual

The blaze was sparked by flammable construction netting.

— Chris Tang

Nov 28 Evening

1 articles|1 sources
apartment complex firedeath tollrescue operationsfirefightersbuilding fire
Human Interest(1)
The Guardian - World NewsNov 28

Rescue efforts end at Hong Kong tower block fire as death toll reaches 128

A massive fire in the Wang Fuk Court apartment complex in Hong Kong resulted in 128 confirmed deaths, with approximately 200 people still missing. The fire, which began on Wednesday and spread through seven of the eight towers, is one of the city's deadliest blazes. Rescue operations have concluded, and investigations are underway, including the arrest of eight people by Hong Kong's anti-corruption watchdog related to construction and safety issues. Authorities confirmed that no fire alarms activated during the incident, prompting further investigation into responsible contractors. The building remains structurally unstable, and evidence collection is expected to take several weeks.

Mixed toneFactual5 sources
Negative

Key Claims

factual

No fire alarms went off in any of the eight towers.

— Andy Yeung, head of the fire services

factual

Hong Kong’s anti-corruption watchdog said it had arrested eight people.

— Independent Commission Against Corruption

statistic

The death toll from the Hong Kong apartment complex fire has risen to 128 with as many as 200 missing.

— officials

quote

The fire in the building was extremely intense, with temperatures at the scene reaching 500 degrees.

— Yeung

factual

The highly flammable polystyrene foam discovered in every elevator window was the primary cause of the fire’s intensity.

— Tang