At least 36 killed in Hong Kong high-rise buildings fire, 279 still missing

By midnight, the Tai Po estate had become a silhouette of loss against the Hong Kong skyline, its familiar towers seared into a single, shuddering memory. Elderly residents stumbled from the smoke, clutching nothing, their homes and histories swallowed in hours. Inside, rescuers faced a furnace: collapsing scaffolding, falling debris, corridors too hot to enter, doors that would never open again. The names of the missing multiplied as shelters filled with the displaced, and one firefighter’s death became the symbol of a city’s grief and fury.Questions now burn almost as fiercely as the blaze itself. How did external scaffolding become a deadly fuse linking tower to tower? Why were thousands living inside a renovation zone wrapped in bamboo and netting, one spark away from catastrophe? As leaders promise investigations and condolences, survivors wait in borrowed clothes, staring toward the darkened shells of their homes, wondering how a routine afternoon became the night Hong Kong changed for good.

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