A Hong Kong woman and her family members broke down in tears outside a community hall in Tai Po on Thursday afternoon, a day after her elderly parents went missing in a massive fire at Wang Fuk Court that has killed at least 65 people.

Hongkongers line up outside Kwong Fuk Community Hall on November 27, 2025 to verify photos and personal items in the hope of identifying relatives who went missing in the deadly Tai Po fire. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Hongkongers line up outside Kwong Fuk Community Hall on November 27, 2025, to verify photos and personal items in the hope of identifying relatives who went missing in the deadly Tai Po fire. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

The woman, who gave only her surname, Chan, was among dozens of people who queued outside Kwong Fuk Community Hall to check photographs of the deceased and personal items found by authorities at the fire site in the hope of identifying their missing relatives. It is estimated that at least 279 people are unaccounted for after the blaze erupted.

💡HKFP grants anonymity to known sources under tightly controlled, limited circumstances defined in our Ethics Code. Among the reasons senior editors may approve the use of anonymity for sources are threats to safety, job security or fears of reprisals.

Speaking to HKFP before she went into the community hall, Chan said her family had visited multiple hospitals on Wednesday night, staying overnight at one to await information on her parents, who were about to turn 70, but to no avail.

The elderly couple lived in Wang Cheong House, the first of the housing estate’s 31-storey blocks that caught fire. The blaze quickly spread, eventually engulfing seven out of the eight blocks in the estate, which contains roughly 2,000 apartment units, housing mostly seniors.

Chan, who spent her childhood in Wang Fuk Court before moving away after marriage, was in tears when she left the community hall. Her husband told other family members they could not identify either of Chan’s parents. He declined an interview and walked away weeping.

Family members of missing Wang Fuk Court residents scrambled to find their loved ones on Thursday. Many mobilised relatives, hoping to speed up identification. They rushed from one temporary shelter to another to register details of their missing family members, while waiting for an update on the rescue operation.

Hongkongers line up outside Kwong Fuk Community Hall on November 27, 2025 to verify photos and personal items in the hope of identifying relatives who went missing in the deadly Tai Po fire. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Hongkongers line up outside Kwong Fuk Community Hall on November 27, 2025, to verify photos and personal items in the hope of identifying relatives who went missing in the deadly Tai Po fire. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Cheng, a medic, asked his friends to help distribute flyers with information about his five-year-old daughter, Hannah, and their foreign domestic helper, Maryan. The Wang Tai House resident told HKFP over the phone that his home security camera showed Hannah and Maryan leaving the residence after the fire broke out, but it remains unclear if they made it out of the building.

Flyers with information about a girl and a domestic helper who went missing during the Wang Fuk Court deadly fire were distributed in Kwong Fuk Estate in Tai Po on Thursday. Photo: Kelly Ho/HKFP.
Flyers with information about a girl and a domestic helper who went missing during the Wang Fuk Court deadly fire were distributed in Kwong Fuk Estate in Tai Po on Thursday. Photo: Kelly Ho/HKFP.

Ben – a pseudonym – waited outside the temporary shelter at CCC Fung Leung Kit Memorial Secondary School for hours, seeking updates on his sister and brother-in-law, who are in their 70s.

His niece sat next to him, too emotional to speak.

Ben said the family had tried contacting the couple after the fire erupted on Wednesday afternoon, but they had not been able to get in touch. They heard that the Fire Services Department (FSD) had reached the floor of the couple’s residence, but there was no information about them.

“There is nothing we can do. The worst part is we lost contact with them,” he said in Cantonese. “Whether they are alive or dead, we still need to know.”

Ben (pseudonym) (left) and his niece sit outside CCC Fung Leung Kit Memorial Secondary School on November 27, 2025 to await information on their relative who lost contact with them after a deadly fire broke out in Tai Po's Wang Fuk Court a day earlier.
From left: Ben, a pseudonym, and his niece sit outside CCC Fung Leung Kit Memorial Secondary School on November 27, 2025, to await information on their missing relatives after a deadly fire broke out at Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po a day earlier.

Social media platforms, such as Threads, were filled with people appealing for information about their loved ones. Many posted photos of missing family members, provided flat numbers, and appealed to the FSD to save them.

💡HKFP Guide: How to support families affected by the deadly Tai Po fire.

Rosanna, who is in her 60s, said she and her husband rushed home on Wednesday after learning about the fire. When they arrived, she begged police officers to let them return to their flat to save their nine-year-old poodle, but their request was denied due to safety concerns.

The dog belonging to Wang Fuk Court resident Rosanna is still unaccounted for after the housing estate in Tai Po was engulfed by flames. Photo: Kelly Ho/HKFP.
The dog belonging to Wang Fuk Court resident Rosanna is still missing after the housing estate in Tai Po was engulfed by flames. Photo: Kelly Ho/HKFP.

“We begged them to let us save the dog… the housing unit is so hot, and there is so much smoke… we have prepared for the worst,” she said.

In a press briefing on Thursday evening, Chief Executive John Lee said the fire in the seven blocks that caught ablaze in Wang Fuk Court was “largely extinguished.”

The cause of the fire remains unknown, but authorities said the spread was exacerbated by construction mesh and other materials encasing the towers, which had been undergoing a large-scale construction project since last year.

See also: Hong Kong launches citywide inspections into housing estate repairs as Tai Po fire death toll hits 55

Police Senior Superintendent Eileen Chung said in the early hours of Thursday that firefighters suspected that the netting, mesh, canvas and plastic sheeting installed on the buildings did not meet fire safety requirements.

Multiple Wang Fuk Court residents told HKFP on Wednesday and Thursday that they noticed cigarette butts around the bamboo scaffolding and in the building lift lobby.

Ivy, who lives in Wang Fuk Court with her husband and three children, said complaints were filed with the building management, but the problem was not eradicated.

Smoke billowing out of Wang Fuk Court on November 27, 2025. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.
Smoke billowing out of Wang Fuk Court on November 27, 2025. Photo: Kyle Lam/HKFP.

Although notices were put up to warn construction workers against smoking following the complaints, the situation continued, she said.

See also: Hong Kong conglomerates donate over HK$100 million to victims of deadly Tai Po blaze

Ivy’s husband, surnamed Luk, who has lived in Wang Fuk Court for decades, said what many affected residents urgently need is a roof over their heads, as many are seeking refuge in relatives’ homes or staying in hotels.

He suggested that the government should hand out cash relief instead of providing supplies that residents may not need.

“We basically have nothing now, except our family. We are already very lucky to have the whole family intact,” he said.

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Ho Long Sze Kelly is a Hong Kong-based journalist covering politics, criminal justice, human rights, social welfare and education. As a Senior Reporter at Hong Kong Free Press, she has covered the aftermath of the 2019 extradition bill protests and the Covid-19 pandemic extensively, as well as documented the transformation of her home city under the Beijing-imposed national security law.

Kelly has a bachelor's degree in Journalism from the University of Hong Kong, with a second major in Politics and Public Administration. Prior to joining HKFP in 2020, she was on the frontlines covering the 2019 citywide unrest for South China Morning Post’s Young Post. She also covered sports and youth-related issues.