
Hong Kong authorities are planning to launch a public consultation over a raft of new fire safety-related requirements and offences with tough penalties following the city’s deadliest blaze in decades.
The bureau said its public consultation would follow its meeting with the Legislative Council’s security panel, scheduled for May 5.
Advertisement
“Our goal is to submit the bill to the Legislative Council for consideration by the end of 2026, with the aim of implementing various reform measures as soon as possible,” it said.
The bureau said that one of the key revisions it was proposing was elevating appropriate administrative measures to legal requirements, such as conducting alarm bell tests at least every six months.
Advertisement
Other proposed changes previously reported by SCMP include sharply increasing the maximum penalty for existing offences related to unauthorised handling of fire equipment and the issuance of false or misleading certificates, up from a HK$50,000 (US$6,380) fine to a maximum fine of HK$3 million and three years’ imprisonment.

Don't Miss:
-
US crackdown threat could shake out China’s ‘distillation’ AI copycats: analysts
-
US drops criminal probe of Fed chair Powell, likely clearing way for nominee Warsh
-
Disciplinary inquiry resumes into doctor’s alleged baby blunder 16 years ago
-
Huawei, DeepSeek strengthen China’s AI self-reliance with collaboration on V4 model
-
US FDA plans ultra-fast review of 3 psychedelic drugs after Trump directive

US Air Power’s Feet of Clay
‘Unacceptable’: Lawmakers react to revelations from ICIJ’s Cancer Calculus investigation
Phuket’s Night Noise Crisis: Who Is Allowing It?