Chinese giants rush to pledge millions after Hong Kong’s deadliest fire since 1948 kills 55

Nov 27, 2025 | Uncategorized

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Firefighters walk near residential buildings that continue to burn at Wang Fuk Court in the Tai Po district on Nov. 27, 2025 in Hong Kong, China.
Isaac Lawrence | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Chinese private firms pledged tens of millions of dollars to support rescue and relief efforts after a deadly residential fire in Hong Kong killed at least 55 people and left hundreds missing.

Alibaba Group

Sportswear maker AntaTencent HoldingsXiaomi Corp

The wave of donations followed comments from President Xi Jinping, who urged all-out efforts to reduce casualties and rallied relevant authorities and parties to provide “necessary support.”

Companies pledge millions after Hong Kong fire
  • 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 Friends Holdings: HK$1 million
  • Xpeng: HK$5 million
  • BYD: HK$10 million
  • Geely: HK$10 million
  • NetEase: HK$10 million
  • Trip.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

Source: Reuters

Chinese entrepreneurs have ramped up their charitable commitments in recent years to heed Beijing’s call to put social responsibility before profits, amid tightened regulatory scrutiny of the private sector.

Xiaomi’s co-founder, Lei Jun, has donated more than 1.7 billion yuan ($240 million) since launching his philanthropic foundation in 2019 to support cutting-edge technology development and provide financial assistance to students from low-income families.

In 2021, Meituan’s founder, Wang Xing, contributedshares worth about $2.3 billion to his philanthropic foundation, which promotes education and scientific research. ByteDance’s Zhang Yiming has also given away parts of his fortune to charitable causes.

A woman is seen crying near residential buildings that continue to burn at Wang Fuk Court in the Tai Po district on Nov. 27, 2025 in Hong Kong, China
Isaac Lawrence | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Worst fire since 1948

The fire is Hong Kong’s deadliest since 1948, when a warehouse blaze killed 176 people.

The latest blaze tore through Wang Fuk Court, an eight-tower public housing complex in northern Hong Kong, home to 4,600 people in 2,000 apartments, according to Reuters.

On Thursday morning, Reuters reported, citing authorities, that the fire in four of the seven affected blocks had been brought under control nearly a full day after the fire began. Firefighters were still working to contain the blaze in the remaining areas.

Officials said the blaze may have started on a section of bamboo scaffolding encasing the complex, then spread to other buildings through the wooden poles and protective netting — prompting public scrutiny of the city’s housing standards.

Hong Kong’s police pointed to a “grossly negligent” construction company for using “highly inflammable” foam material, protective mesh sheets and plastic that may not have met fire standards. Three men from the construction company have been arrested on suspicion of “manslaughter.”

Volunteers give out food to residents after a major fire swept through several apartment blocks at the Wang Fuk Court residential estate in Hong Kong’s Tai Po district on Nov. 27, 2025.
Peter Parks | Afp | Getty Images

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