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Hong Kong high-rise fire kills at least 36, 200-plus missing
A huge fire engulfed a crowded Hong Kong high-rise complex, killing at least 36 people and leaving more than 200 unaccounted for in the city's worst blaze in decades.
The fire, which started on Wednesday afternoon and was still burning in the early hours of Thursday, shocked the Chinese financial hub, which has some of the world's most densely populated and tallest apartment blocks.
Huge flames first took hold on bamboo scaffolding on several apartment blocks of Wang Fuk Court, which contains nearly 2,000 flats in eight towers in the northern district of Tai Po and was reportedly undergoing estate-wide maintenance.
City leader John Lee early Thursday gave the death toll as 36, including a firefighter, with 279 people unaccounted for.
Twenty-nine people were hospitalised, with seven in critical condition.
Lee said the fire was "gradually getting under control", with flames still spotted at four out of the eight buildings in the complex. He was speaking almost 12 hours after the fire broke out.
The cause was still not known.
At the scene of the fire, an AFP reporter heard loud cracking sounds, possibly from the burning bamboo, and saw thick plumes of smoke billowing from the buildings as flames and ash reached high into the sky.
A 65-year-old resident surnamed Yuen said he had lived in the complex for more than four decades and that many of his neighbours were elderly and might not be mobile.
"The windows were closed because of the maintenance, (some people) didn't know there was a fire and had to be told to evacuate via phone calls by neighbours," Yuen told AFP.
"I'm devastated. There is loss of property and loss of life, and even a firefighter has died."
More than 900 people sought refuge at temporary shelters, Lee said.
- 'Unable to reach people who requested help' -
Authorities said they will launch a probe into the fire as well as into the materials on the buildings' exterior that may have caused the blaze to spread faster than usual.
A police officer at a temporary shelter told AFP it was unclear how many people were unaccounted for because residents were still trickling in late into the night to report missing family members.
Sections of charred scaffolding fell from the burning blocks and flames could be seen inside apartments, sometimes belching out through windows into the night sky, casting an eerie orange glow on surrounding buildings.
"The temperature at the scene is very high and there are some floors where we have been unable to reach people who requested help, but we will keep trying," said Derek Armstrong Chan, the deputy director of fire service operations.
He said the fire likely spread from one building to another due to the wind and drifting debris, although he added that authorities are investigating the cause of the blaze.
Chinese President Xi Jinping expressed condolences to the victims, including "the firefighter who died in the line of duty", according to state media.
"He offered sympathies to the families of the victims and those affected by the disaster, and called for making every effort to extinguish the fire and minimise casualties and losses," state broadcaster CCTV said.
Lee, the city leader, said he was "deeply saddened" and that all government departments were assisting residents affected by the fire.
- 'Dare not leave' -
A Tai Po resident surnamed So, 57, said the fire was "heartbreaking".
"There's nothing that can be done about the property. We can only hope that everyone, no matter old or young, can return safely," So told AFP.
An apartment owner in his 40s who did not want to give his name told AFP that the government needed to help those made homeless by the blaze.
"The fire is not yet under control and I dare not leave, and I don't know what I can do," he said.
Residents were seen being evacuated via large coaches, with local media reporting that adjacent blocks were also being cleared.
Deadly fires were once a regular scourge in densely populated Hong Kong, especially in poorer neighbourhoods.
However, safety measures have been ramped up in recent decades and such fires have become much less commonplace.
M.White--AT