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Tag: Wang Fuk Court

A Cry Memorialized

As a deadly fire raged at Hong Kong’s Tai Po Wang Fuk Court housing estate on November 26, 2025, Reuters photojournalist Tyrone Siu (蕭文超) captured a moment of grief and powerlessness that stunned news audiences across the world. That photograph, “A Desperate Plea” (絕望的懇求), has now won Siu the Asia-Pacific and Oceania single photo award at the 2026 World Press Photo Contest, according to an announcement by World Press Photo.

The image shows a man, identified only as Mr. Wong, screaming in anguish from a footbridge outside the estate roughly one hour after the fire broke out. Wong watches his home burn, unaware in that moment that a phone exchange he has just had with his wife trapped inside the building will be their last. The World Press Photo jury praised the photograph for capturing Wong’s sense of shock, grief and powerlessness, and for providing a vivid record of one of the most defining moments in 2025. Siu would return to the scene in successive days to document the family’s full story. The blaze ultimately claimed 168 lives, becoming the deadliest fire in Hong Kong since 1948.

To date, an independent committee has held 11 hearings to investigate the Tai Po fire, with testimony from residents and companies involved in building management, construction, and fire safety. Initial findings suggest that building management and fire safety authorities ignored repeated complaints and warnings from residents over safety issues.

Siu, a Reuters staff photographer who has covered the city since 2009, previously won a Pulitzer Prize for his documentation of Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protest movement. He was among 3,747 photographers from 141 countries whose work was considered this year. The 2026 World Press Photo of the Year and two finalists will be announced on April 23, according to Now.com.

Silence Follows Harassment

Last Friday, InMedia (獨立媒體), one of Hong Kong’s few remaining independent news outlets, published an unusual apology to readers through its newsletter. The outlet said that its normal operations had been disrupted in recent days  by “harassing messages” (滋擾訊息) as it sought to cover hearings looking into the deadly fire at the Wang Fuk Court residential buildings in November last year that killed 168 people. InMedia said in its message that it had filed police reports in two specific cases of harassment by “unidentified persons” (不明人士).  

On Tuesday, online commentator Fung Hei-kin (馮睑乾), a former columnist for Hong Kong’s Apple Daily, noted in a Facebook post that not one mainstream Hong Kong outlet had covered the InMedia story in the four days since the outlet’s disclosure. In fact, the only outlet to cover the news at all, said Fung, had beenEpoch Times, the right-wing American media outlet backed by the Falun Gong religious group — a brief report that added no new information. Fung likened the silence over the InMedia case to that which followed revelations by the independent Hong Kong Journalists Association (HKJA) in September 2024 that reporters from thirteen news organizations had been harassed or threatened in the preceding few months. The chilling effect on the press could clearly be inferred from the silence, said Fung. “The more you think about it,” he wrote, “the more chilling it becomes.”