logo
Elderly man living alone found dead after early-morning fire in Hong Kong

Elderly man living alone found dead after early-morning fire in Hong Kong

HKFP14-07-2025
A 78-year-old man living alone has been found dead after a fire broke out in a public housing unit in Hong Kong.
The Fire Services Department (FSD) said on Monday that it received reports of the blaze in a third-floor unit in Wo King House, Lai King Estate, at 5.04am.
The FSD sent 14 fire trucks and six ambulances to the scene, deploying 81 firefighters and ambulance officers in total. The fire, which measured about six by five metres, was largely put out at 5.20 am, it said.
'A male corpse… was discovered in the flat,' Wong Cheuk-kei, an assistant divisional officer of the FSD, said in Cantonese during a press briefing.
Wong added that the 78-year-old man was found on a bed and was living by himself.
'We have also rescued three people in other units on the same floor. Fifty others evacuated themselves to safe areas,' he said.
Senior ambulance officer Lai Hong-keung said the three people – a man and two women – who were rescued suffered from inhaling smoke.
The man and one of the two women were sent to Prince Margaret Hospital, while the second woman refused to be hospitalised after she was treated at the scene, Lai said.
Police said there was no evidence suggesting criminal activities linked to the blaze.
The FSD is investigating the cause of the fire, Wong said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hong Kong authorities urged to reopen case into cabby who died in police custody
Hong Kong authorities urged to reopen case into cabby who died in police custody

South China Morning Post

time16 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong authorities urged to reopen case into cabby who died in police custody

The daughters of a taxi driver who died after being put in a headlock during an arrest in 2012 have called on Hong Kong authorities to bring the police officer involved to justice after an inquest concluded that the cabby was killed unlawfully. A jury of two men and three women on Thursday returned the same rare verdict a separate panel had reached when the decade-old case regarding Chan Fai-wong's death was first examined at the Coroner's Court in 2018. Chan died from complications arising from a cervical vertebra dislocation in December 2012, a month after Constable Lam Wai-wing pulled him into a police vehicle while wrapping his arm around the cabby's neck. The officer maintained he immediately released his arm the moment it came into contact with the driver's neck. The High Court in 2022 quashed a five-member jury's 3-2 verdict of unlawful killing in the first inquest after finding the presiding coroner had oversimplified her instructions to the jurors to the effect of usurping their role in determining the facts of the case. The new jury on Thursday reached the same conclusion, but by a wider margin of 4-1, after closed-door deliberations began the previous day. Jurors found that Chan died of bronchopneumonia he had contracted as a complication of the neck injury inflicted by police. 'This incident shows that police misconduct can threaten the lives of arrested people,' the jury said.

Hong Kong university student found guilty of insulting national anthem during World Cup qualifier
Hong Kong university student found guilty of insulting national anthem during World Cup qualifier

HKFP

time2 days ago

  • HKFP

Hong Kong university student found guilty of insulting national anthem during World Cup qualifier

A Hong Kong university student has been found guilty of insulting the national anthem during a World Cup qualifier football match between the city's team and Iran in June last year. Lau Pun-hei, a 19-year-old student in politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, was convicted on Wednesday for turning his back to the pitch while the Chinese national anthem, 'March of the Volunteers,' played ahead of the match at the Hong Kong Stadium on June 6, 2024. Magistrate Kestrel Lam of the Eastern Magistrates' Courts said the playing of the anthem before a match 'represented national pride, unity and identity.' 'That the defendant chose to turn his back to the pitch was obviously improper and disrespectful,' Lam said in Cantonese. The magistrate noted that Lau had turned his back to the pitch only during the Chinese anthem and that the student faced the pitch and clapped during the Iranian anthem. Lam found that it was a deliberate act to demonstrate Lau's dissatisfaction with, or contempt for, the national anthem. 'Different people may have different feelings towards the nation and its anthem. Supporters may sing along. Meanwhile, people who don't support the country should allow the anthem to be played solemnly,' the magistrate said. Lam rejected the defence's argument that some other people in the stadium, including the police officers who filmed the spectators while the national anthem was being played, also had their backs facing the pitch. The police officers were carrying out their duties, Lam said, but the student had no reason to do the same. Whether an act constitutes an insult to the national anthem must be based on the facts and the circumstances in the case, the magistrate added. He also rejected the defence's argument that the law was vague and could infringe upon one's freedom of expression. Steven Kwan, Lau's lawyer, told the court that the student was a keen supporter of Hong Kong and a staunch advocate of an eco-friendly lifestyle, showing his care for the world. Lau's offence was of a 'minor nature,' Kwan said, as his act was 'quiet, peaceful, and did not involve any violence.' Kwan urged the court to adopt a non-custodial sentence given the defendant's young age. Lam scheduled sentencing for August 13 to allow the court to receive a report on the defendant's background. Lau was given bail pending sentencing. Hong Kong passed the National Anthem Ordinance in 2020, which criminalises 'insulting behaviour' towards the anthem. Under the law, one must 'stand solemnly' and 'not behave in a way disrespectful to the national anthem.' Offenders may be punished by up to three years in prison and a fine of HK$50,000.

Gov't denies using new prison rules after visitor allegedly barred from seeing inmate jailed for nat. sec offences
Gov't denies using new prison rules after visitor allegedly barred from seeing inmate jailed for nat. sec offences

HKFP

time23-07-2025

  • HKFP

Gov't denies using new prison rules after visitor allegedly barred from seeing inmate jailed for nat. sec offences

The Correctional Services Department (CSD) has not used tightened prison rules to ban any visitors or impose any restrictions on prison visits, the authorities said, after a visitor was allegedly denied permission to see an inmate. In a statement published on Tuesday night, the CSD acknowledged that it had denied a member of the public permission to visit someone in prison that morning because the visitor 'was not on the declared visitors list of the PIC,' or person in custody. 'According to the established mechanism, visitors must be declared visitors on the PIC's declared visitors list,' the CSD said. 'Since the Prison (Amendment) Rules 2025 came into effect last Friday, the CSD has not invoked Rule 48 of the Prison Rules to prohibit any person from conducting visits, nor has it imposed restrictions or conditions on any visits.' The new prison rules, which allow the CSD to restrict or ban a person from visiting an inmate on certain grounds, including safeguarding national security, took effect on Friday, just two weeks after the government proposed the amendments. Separately, Ben – a pseudonym – told HKFP that he went to a prison on Tuesday morning with a friend to visit an inmate jailed for national security offences. Ben said that he had confirmed with the CSD on Monday and last week that his name was on the visitors' list of the person in custody. 'On Tuesday morning, after CSD staff checked my identity card and my friend's, they said I was not allowed to visit because the person in custody had taken my name off the list, but my friend could still pay a visit,' Ben said in Cantonese. He added that the detainee's family had contacted the CSD to enquire what had happened. New rules Under the new prison rules, the CSD can restrict the visitation rights of religious leaders and lawyers if it sees a need to protect national security. Existing rules allow a chaplain to visit a prisoner 'at all reasonable times.' Additionally, the CSD can apply for a warrant from a magistrate to bar an inmate from communicating with a legal representative, in person or in writing, as well as with anyone associated with the law firm concerned.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store