A 67-year-old painter has been found dead at the Shek Kong Barracks, a military base in the New Territories used by the Chinese People’s Liberation Army.

Police said on Tuesday that an initial investigation suggested the woman had fallen from a ladder while working at the location.

Shek Kong Barracks. File photo: Wiki Commons.
Shek Kong Barracks. File photo: Wiki Commons.

Police received a report at 6.35 am on Tuesday saying a worker had been found unconscious in the barracks. She was certified dead after police arrived at the scene.

An autopsy was required to determine the cause of death, the police added.

Local media outlets reported that the worker was employed by a construction company. She lost contact with her family after calling her daughter at noon on Monday, and her family reported her missing at midnight Tuesday.

The family went to Shek Kong Barracks early on Tuesday morning to search for the elderly worker, where she was found unconscious, Ming Pao reported.

PLA garrison
Shek Kong Barracks. File Photo: GovHK.

Fay Siu, the chief executive of the Association for the Rights of Industrial Accident Victims, told HKFP by phone on Wednesday that the labour group was yet to reach out to the family of the female worker.

Siu said the incident marked the third time this year a worker had been reported missing and later found dead at a work site.

The labour group urged Hong Kong employers to strengthen safety management and make sure working conditions were safe and that workers were signing off from construction sites, especially when working alone.

“There should be a digital system in construction sites where workers are required to check in when they start work and sign off when they finish, and employers should be alerted if anyone does not check out of the system on time,” Siu said in Cantonese. “If there’s no such system, employers should keep in touch with their employees to check their safety.”

Association for the Rights of Industrial Accident Victims (ARIAV) Siu Sin-man
Fay Siu, Chief Executive of the Association for the Rights of Industrial Accident Victims (First from the left), on April 28, 2023. Photo: ARIAV.

Siu also reminded construction workers to keep their family informed about whom they are working for and where.

Workers lost contact after work

In March, after a construction worker failed to return home, his family notified his site supervisor that he was missing.

After checking the CCTV images and patrolling the site, the worker was found unconscious and was sent to Tuen Mun Hospital, where he was later confirmed dead.

A worker at a construction site in Hong Kong on February 13, 2023. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
A worker at a construction site in Hong Kong on February 13, 2023. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Siu said on October 10, another male worker was found dead in a construction site in Lok Ma Chau after his family lost contact with him after work hours. The family had reached out to the labour group for assistance.

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Irene Chan is a reporter at Hong Kong Free Press and has an interest in covering political and social change. She previously worked at Initium Media as chief editor for Hong Kong news and was a community organiser at the Society for Community Organisation serving the underprivileged. She has a bachelor’s degree in Journalism from Fudan University and a master’s degree in social work from the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Irene is the recipient of two Society of Publishers in Asia (SOPA) awards and three honourable mentions for her investigative, feature and video reporting. She also received a Human Rights Press Award for multimedia reporting and an honourable mention for feature writing.