Firefighters stroll close to residential buildings that proceed to burn at Wang Fuk Court docket within the Tai Po district on Nov. 27, 2025 in Hong Kong, China.
Isaac Lawrence | Getty Photos Information | Getty Photos
Chinese language personal companies pledged tens of tens of millions of {dollars} to assist rescue and reduction efforts after a lethal residential hearth in Hong Kong killed at the least 55 individuals and left a whole bunch lacking.
Alibaba Group and its affiliate Ant Group collectively dedicated 30 million Hong Kong {dollars} to assist hearth reduction efforts. Alibaba founder Jack Ma, one of the vital recognizable Chinese language entrepreneurs, additionally pledged $30 million by means of his charity basis to offer emergency assist to these affected.
Sportswear maker Anta, which owns manufacturers akin to Jack Wolfskin and Fila, stated it might donate HK$30 million in money and gear. Tencent Holdings, Xiaomi Corp and ByteDance every pledged HK$10 million to assist the rescue efforts and assist victims of the blaze.
The wave of donations adopted feedback from President Xi Jinping, who urged all-out efforts to cut back casualties and rallied related authorities and events to offer “obligatory assist.”
Corporations pledge tens of millions after Hong Kong hearth
- China Pink Cross: 2 million yuan
- Xiaomi: HK$10 million
- Anta Group: HK$30 million
- Tencent: HK$10 million
- ByteDance: HK$10 million
- Ant Group: HK$10 million
- Alibaba Group: HK$20 million
- Fuguiniao Group: HK$5 million
- Be Mates Holdings: HK$1 million
- Xpeng: HK$5 million
- BYD: HK$10 million
- NetEase: HK$10 million
- Journey.com: HK$10 million
- Wens Foodstuff: HK$40 million
- Midea Group: HK$10 million
- Du Xiaoman: HK$10 million
- Xtep Group: HK$20 million
- Lenovo: HK$10 million
Supply: Reuters
Chinese language entrepreneurs have ramped up their charitable commitments in recent times to heed Beijing’s name to place social accountability earlier than income, amid tightened regulatory scrutiny of the personal sector.
Xiaomi’s co-founder, Lei Jun, has donated greater than 1.7 billion yuan ($240 million) since launching his philanthropic basis in 2019 to assist cutting-edge know-how growth and supply monetary help to college students from low-income households.
In 2021, Meituan’s founder, Wang Xing, contributed shares price about $2.3 billion to his philanthropic basis, which promotes training and scientific analysis. ByteDance’s Zhang Yiming has additionally given away components of his fortune to charitable causes.
A girl is seen crying close to residential buildings that proceed to burn at Wang Fuk Court docket within the Tai Po district on Nov. 27, 2025 in Hong Kong, China
Isaac Lawrence | Getty Photos Information | Getty Photos
Worst hearth since 1948
The fireplace on Thursday is Hong Kong’s deadliest since 1948, when a warehouse blaze killed 176 individuals.
The newest blaze tore by means of Wang Fuk Court docket, an eight-tower housing advanced in northern Hong Kong, residence to 4,600 individuals in 2,000 residences, in response to Reuters.
On Thursday morning, Reuters reported, citing authorities, that the fireplace in 4 of the seven affected blocks had been introduced underneath management practically a full day after the fireplace started. Firefighters have been nonetheless working to include the blaze within the remaining areas.
Officers stated the blaze could have began on a piece of bamboo scaffolding encasing the advanced, then unfold to different buildings by means of the picket poles and protecting netting — prompting public scrutiny of town’s housing requirements.
Hong Kong’s police pointed to a “grossly negligent” development firm that used protecting mesh sheets and plastic that won’t meet hearth requirements and foam materials that’s “extremely inflammable.” Three males from the development firm have been arrested on suspicion of “manslaughter.”
Volunteers give out meals to residents after a significant hearth swept by means of a number of condo blocks on the Wang Fuk Court docket residential property in Hong Kong’s Tai Po district on Nov. 27, 2025.
Peter Parks | Afp | Getty Photos

