Advertisement
Hong Kong’s Tai Po fire tragedy
OpinionHong Kong Opinion
Opinion
Alice Wu

Tai Po fire hearings reveal broken promises to Hongkongers

The hearings have exposed gaps in the enforcement of safety rules and an attitude of avoiding blame among government departments

3-MIN READ3-MIN
5
Listen
Witnesses from ISS EastPoint Properties leave the City Gallery in Central following the morning session of the Wang Fuk Court fire hearing on April 1. Photo: Karma Lo
Alice Wu fell down the rabbit hole of politics aged 12, when she ran her first election campaign.
The independent committee investigating Hong Kong’s deadliest fire in decades concluded the first round of hearings last week. It is essential that we get to the bottom of the human and systemic errors that led to the Tai Po inferno.

There were many, as anticipated. Fragmentation of responsibility was rampant, which is probably expected for projects of this size with so many parties involved. If the government isn’t there to make sure that things are done properly, monitor and enforce the standards it has set to protect the lives and property of its residents, then it has failed at its most fundamental job.

From what we have seen from the reports on the first round of hearings, the government isn’t as efficient or effective as it would like us to believe despite the reforms that have been introduced.

Advertisement
The line different government departments have taken when questioned on their role in checking fire hazards and the fireproof quality of material used has basically been “it’s not our responsibility”. On residents’ complaints over construction workers smoking on site, an occupational safety officer from the Labour Department explained that “public safety matters” did not fall under its supervision.
The Labour Department, Fire Services Department and the Housing Bureau’s Independent Checking Unit (ICU) all insisted it wasn’t their responsibility to ensure that the building material used in the renovation of Wang Fuk Court met required fireproof standards. Rules were set, but no one thought it was their job to supervise.
Advertisement
The result? An incredible number of lives lost, families torn apart and displaced, homes and lifetimes’ worth of memories destroyed.
Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x