
Worker falls to death at Hong Kong construction site despite wearing harness
Advertisement
The 62-year-old scaffolder was working on the fifth floor of a construction site on On Chuen Street, next to the Grace Industrial Building, in Fanling and fell sometime before 3pm.
His colleagues found him lying motionless on the ground and immediately called emergency services.
Paramedics arrived on the scene and found him unconscious. He was taken to North District Hospital in Sheung Shui, but was later confirmed dead.
According to local media outlets, the man had more than 30 years of experience and was installing a nylon net on on the external wall of the building before he fell.
Advertisement
Investigators had also found that the man was wearing a safety harness at the time of the incident, local newspapers said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
10 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Ex-chairman of Hong Kong-listed Neo-China surrenders after 13 years on the run
A former top executive of a Hong Kong-listed company surrendered to the city's anti-corruption agency on Tuesday after more than a decade on the run. Advertisement Li Songxiao, the former chairman of Neo-China Group (Holdings), now known as Shanghai Industrial Urban Development Group (SIUD), handed himself over to the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) over his involvement in fraudulent property deals worth more than HK$330 million (US$42 million). Li had allegedly conspired with two then senior executives, Che Hanshu and Zhang Yaohui, to defraud shareholders and the Hong Kong stock exchange, by inflating the profit and assets of the developers through fraudulent transactions, according to a statement from ICAC. Warrants for the trio were issued in February 2011 by a magistrate, but by that time they had already left Hong Kong, ICAC said. Li, Che and Zhang had conspired with the company's secretary and financial controller to defraud shareholders between November 2003 and July 2007, it added. Li, 59, faces two common law charges of conspiracy to defraud. He is scheduled to appear at Eastern Magistrates' Courts for a mention hearing on Wednesday. Advertisement The charges centre on two property deals in which Neo-China allegedly misled investors – one involving the HK$210 million purchase of Top Fair, and another concerning the HK$123 million sale of its subsidiary, Noble Time Development, to Northwest Link.


South China Morning Post
12 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
3 arrested for alleged theft worth HK$80,000 on flight from India to Hong Kong
Hong Kong police have arrested three men for stealing property worth more than HK$80,000 (US$10,190) during a flight from India to the city. The force said on Tuesday that the arrests the previous day were made after police received reports from three Indian nationals who had flown to Hong Kong from the country. The victims placed their backpacks on the overhead rack of the cabin, and subsequently found that cash and other property were lost, prompting them to seek help from the force. Three mainland Chinese men aged between 47 and 58 were arrested and detained after a preliminary investigation. The trio had allegedly stolen a pair of bracelets worth HK$50,000 and Hong Kong dollars and foreign currency cash valued at HK$34,400 from the victims. The case is being investigated by a criminal intelligence and support team at the force's airport division.


South China Morning Post
13 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
China's famous Shaolin Temple gets a new abbot after predecessor removed
China has appointed a new abbot to the country's famous Shaolin Temple, two days after authorities at the Buddhist monastery announced its head monk for more than 25 years had been placed under investigation for alleged financial and sex scandals. The abbot of White Horse Temple, Shi Yinle, will replace him, according to a brief statement from the Shaolin Temple on Tuesday. Companies linked to disgraced former abbot Shi Yongxin, 60, have been deregistered and his Buddhist credentials revoked, the South China Morning Post reported earlier. 'In accordance with the regulations on the appointment of abbots of Chinese Buddhist Temples, after democratic evaluation and approval by the Shaolin Temple and following the relevant procedures, Venerable Yinle was invited to be the abbot of Shaolin Temple,' the one paragraph statement said. Established over 1,500 years ago in Henan province, Shaolin Temple is the birthplace of Zen Buddhism and an Unesco World Heritage site, famed as the cradle of Shaolin kung fu. White Horse Temple is also in Henan. More to follow …