Tip of an iceberg: Hong Kong's deadly blaze raises anger over corruption and safety lapses

HONG KONG (AP) — Uncomfortable questions are being raised over who is to blame for Hong Kong'sdeadliest blaze in decades.

As the territory mourns over the high-rise apartment fire that killed at least 151 people, anger and frustration are mounting over building safety lapses, suspected construction corruption and lax government oversight.

But bigger issues are at play. Some political analysts and observers say the tragedy could be the "tip of an iceberg" inHong Kong,a city whose skyline is built on high-rise buildings. Suspicions of bid-rigging and use of hazardous construction materials in renovation projects across other housing estates have left many worried the disaster could be repeated.

Police and the city's anti-corruption body have arrested 14 people so far in a wide-ranging probe into a multi-million dollar renovation project at the Wang Fuk Court apartment complex, where the fire broke out on Wednesday. Those detained includescaffolding subcontractors, directors of a construction company and a consultancy, many of them on suspicion of manslaughter and gross negligence.

"The question (one) should be asking, really is that, what happened at Wang Fuk Court, can it happen elsewhere?" said Steve Tsang, director of the SOAS China Institute in London.

Hong Kong officials initially said tests of green netting covering bamboo scaffolding at the housing complex in suburban Tai Po showed that it met fire safety codes, buthighly flammable foam panelsused to seal windows during the repairs, aided by strong winds, caused the blaze to spread swiftly between seven of the eight towers in the complex.

But on Monday, Eric Chan, Hong Kong's chief secretary, said that seven of 20 additional samples collected later from the site failed to meet safety standards. Authorities said there was evidence contractors cut costs by using cheaper substandard netting along with standard materials to pad their profits, after a typhoon in July damaged some of the netting originally installed.

Some fire alarms failed to sound when the fire broke out, residents and officials said.

"It did open a Pandora's box," said John Burns, an honorary professor of politics and public administration at the University of Hong Kong (HKU).

"You've got all of these issues which have been swept under the table," said HKU's Burns. "Because of all that we now know -- or believe we know -- about bid-rigging, collusion, corruption, no fire alarms, government negligence, all of these things have come out."

As a precaution, authorities suspended work on renovationsat 28 other projects managed by the same construction company. With residents of high-rises worried, contractors were removing foam boards and netting used to cover scaffolding at other projects.

The netting "is not a one particular estate problem. It's a much wider general problem," said Tsang of SOAS.

Government oversight also has come into question. Residents of Wang Fuk Court had been voicing safety concerns to the authorities about construction materials such as netting used in the renovations, according todocuments reviewed by The Associated Press.

The Labor Department said it reviewed netting's product quality certificate and found it "in line" with standards. It also said it had conducted 16 inspections at the complex since last year -- most recently about a week before the fire -- and had warned contractors repeatedly they had to ensure they met fire safety requirements.

As critics raise questions about government accountability, Hong Kong officials are emphasizing actions they have taken against the contractors, and aid provided to the victims.

"The focus of the people's anger is on not so much the kinds of materials used (but the) lack of supervision and oversight from (government) departments," said Willy Lam, a political analyst and senior fellow at The Jamestown Foundation.

Responding to public pressure, the territory's chief executive, John Lee, said Tuesday that an independent committee of inquiry led by a judge will investigate the fire. He brushed aside a question from a reporter on if he should keep his job.

"Yes, we need a reform. Yes, we have identified failures in different stages. That is exactly why we must act seriously to ensure that all these loopholes are plugged," he said, adding that the "whole building renovation system" will also be reformed to prevent any further such disasters.

Ronny Tong, an adviser to Lee, deflected questions about possible lax enforcement. "Some people have broken the law and they were deliberately trying to deceive authorities. This is not the problem of the those who enforce the laws, right?"

Critics say bid-rigging and other collusion, inflated costs and a lack of transparency are common in Hong Kong projects. Multi-layered subcontracting chains, which are common for big projects, raise the risks for substandard work and limited oversight, said Jason Poon, a contractor turned activist who has exposed problems at other Hong Kong construction projects.

"This is just the tip of an iceberg," Poon said.

Hong Kong, a former British colony that was handed to Chinese control in 1997, increasingly has cracked down on dissent and criticism of the government, which is deemed politically sensitive.

A sweeping national security law imposed by Beijing in 2020 after a crackdown on massive pro-democracy protests already has effectively eliminated most public dissent. So, Beijing's national security arm in Hong Kong and local officials moved quickly to stifle accusations of government negligence over the deadly blaze.

On Saturday, the organizer of a petition calling for officials to take responsibility for the firewas arrested by national security police, local media including the online media outlet HK01 reported.

The Office for Safeguarding National Security in Hong Kong warned that the city's tough national security law would be imposed against "anti-China" forces who use the fire to "incite hatred against authorities".

The disaster may overshadow an election on Dec. 7 for Hong Kong's Legislative Council if angry voters stay away, said Jean-Pierre Cabestan, a locally-based political scientist and a senior research fellow at Paris's Asia Centre think tank. Turnout for such votes is scrutinized by Beijing as an indicator of approval of the semi-autonomous territory's "patriots-only" governance system.

"The question for the Hong Kong government is: do they care about what the people think?" Burns said. "They absolutely should. (And) if they ignore public opinion, I think, on this issue, this is a huge mistake."

Tip of an iceberg: Hong Kong's deadly blaze raises anger over corruption and safety lapses

HONG KONG (AP) — Uncomfortable questions are being raised over who is to blame for Hong Kong'sdeadliest blaze in deca...
A close photo of Trump, who is wearing a dark suit and red tie

US President Donald Trump has commuted the sentence of former investment manager David Gentile, who was just days into a seven-year prison sentence for fraud.

Bureau of Prisons records show that Gentile was released on Wednesday, less than two weeks after he reported to prison.

Gentile, the former chief executive and founder of GPB Capital, was convicted last year in what federal prosecutors described as a multi-year scheme to defraud more than 10,000 investors by misrepresenting the performance of private equity funds.

He's the latest in a string of white-collar criminals whose sentences Trump has commuted.

Gentile was convicted in August last year of securities and wire fraud charges, and sentenced in May. His co-defendant, Jeffry Schneider, was sentenced to six years on the same charges and is due to report to prison in January.

US attorney Joseph Nocella said at the time of Gentile's sentencing that GPB Capital was built on a "foundation of lies" and that the company made $1.6bn (£1.2bn) while using investor capital to pay distributions to other investors.

"The sentences imposed today are well deserved and should serve as a warning to would-be fraudsters that seeking to get rich by taking advantage of investors gets you only a one-way ticket to jail," he said.

But the White House says the Department of Justice under former President Joe Biden made multiple missteps - and that investors were aware that their money could be going towards other people's dividends.

"Even though this was disclosed to investors the Biden Department of Justice claimed this was a Ponzi scheme," the White House official said.

"This claim was profoundly undercut by the fact that GPB had explicitly told investors what would happen."

The official also cited concerns from Gentile that prosecutors had elicited false testimony.

Trump's commutation of Gentile's sentence does not clear him of his crimes like a full presidential pardon would, and it does not get rid of other potential penalties imposed.

So far in his second term, the president has pardoned or commuted the sentences of multiple people convicted of different types of fraud, including wire, securities, tax and healthcare fraud.

Last month, he pardoned Tennessee state House Speaker Glen Casada who was convicted of fraud, money laundering and conspiracy charges.

Correction 1 December 2025: This article incorrectly stated that Jeffry Schneider "remains behind bars". It has been amended to make clear that he is yet to begin serving his prison sentence.

Trump releases fraudster executive days into prison sentence

US President Donald Trump has commuted the sentence of former investment manager David Gentile, who was just days into a seven-year prison ...
U.S. envoy in Moscow for high-stakes Ukraine peace talks with Putin

President Donald Trump's special envoy is meeting Russian PresidentVladimir PutinTuesday for highly anticipated talks that Washington hopes will convince the Kremlin to end hiswar in Ukraine.

Fresh offnegotiations with Ukrainian officials in Floridathis weekend, Steve Witkoff is expected to lay out for Putin a version of the peace plan that has been agreed with Kyiv, hoping the Russian leader will compromise on his hardline demands.

The details of the revamped plan have not been released. The original proposal approved by Trump last month was seen as heavily biased toward Russia, and would force Kyiv to cede its territories to Moscow, including the land that it currently still controls. It would also limit the size of Kyiv's army and bar Ukraine from ever joining NATO.

TOPSHOT-RUSSIA-US-POLITICS-DIPLOMACY (Gavriil Grigorov / Pool via AFP-Getty Images)

The proposal blindsided Kyiv, which launched a storm of talks and negotiations in Europe and and the U.S. over the last two weeks to try to amend the plan and make it more palatable to Ukraine. Trump initially imposed a Thanksgiving deadline for Kyiv to accept the deal, but has since said that he wants an agreement as soon as possible.

Putin signaled last week thathe was ready for a "serious" discussion with the U.S.and said that a version of the plan that was agreed during talks with Ukrainians in Geneva, Switzerland, last month could form the "framework" of a final peace settlement. Still, he said his army had the upper hand on the battlefield and if no agreement was reached, he would get what he wanted by force.

It comes as the government of Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been weakened by a major corruption scandal. His powerful chief of staff and top negotiator, Andriy Yermak,resigned last weekafter being implicated in the probe.

U.S. envoy in Moscow for high-stakes Ukraine peace talks with Putin

President Donald Trump's special envoy is meeting Russian PresidentVladimir PutinTuesday for highly anticipated talks...
Travis L. Turner (WCYB)

Federal authorities joined the search fora fugitive high school football coachbeing sought in connection with a child sex abuse image and solicitation probe in Virginia — and warn he may be armed.

The U.S. Marshals Service on Mondayasked anyone with informationabout Travis Turner, 46, to call it or Virginia State Police.

"VSP is still searching for Turner with the assistance of the FBI and U.S. Marshals Service," state police spokesperson Robin Lawson said in statement Monday.

Turner, coach of the undefeated Union High School Bears in Big Stone Gap,vanished Nov. 20in what was initiallycast as a simple missing persons case.

But then state police announced last week they had obtained arrest warrants for Turner on suspicion of five counts of possession of child pornography and five counts of using a computer to solicit a minor.

Since his disappearance, Union has won two playoff games, most recently a 21-14 triumph overRidgeviewon Saturday tocapture the Region 2D championship.

Union is set to playGlenvar High Schoolon Saturday in the Class 2 state semifinals.

Police and school officials have declined to say whether any victims or complaining witnesses against Turner are connected to Union High, a public school with about 600 students in the far southwest corner of Virginia.

The high school is about170 miles west of Virginia Tech Universityin Blacksburg and about120 miles northeast of the University of Tennessee.

U.S. marshals join hunt for fugitive Virginia football coach, warn he may be armed

Federal authorities joined the search fora fugitive high school football coachbeing sought in connection with a child sex abuse image and s...

As if the Thanksgiving blast of cold air wasn't enough, an even colder shot of arctic air will dive into the country by the end of the week bringing even colder temperatures.

This time daily records could be broken from the mid-Mississippi Valley to the Midwest and even into parts of the mid-Atlantic and Northeast.

Dozens Of Records Could Fall

We could see several dozen daily record lows across more than a dozen states either tied or broken Thursday and Friday morning. These stretch from the Plains and Midwest to the Northeast. Places like Cedar Rapids and Des Moines, Iowa, as well as La Crosse, Wisconsin, could all break record morning lows.

We are talking not just temperatures below freezing, butbelow zero.A pretty significant chunk of the Midwest and Northern Plains will wake up Thursday morning below zero.

The afternoons won't offer much warmth either. More than a dozen record cold high temperatures could be felt from Missouri to Michigan, and a few even sprinkled in the Northeast.

Here's a look at where the record cold will be.

Timing The Arctic Blast

This next round of cold will begin arriving in the Northern Plains and Upper Midwest on Wednesday. Highs across portions of North Dakota and Minnesota will only make it to the single digits.

Thursday:Thursday morning, the big freeze will dive down as far south as Oklahoma. Morning lows will drop as much as 10 to 15 degreesbelow zerofor a wide swath of the Midwest and Northern Plains. Even Iowa and southern Nebraska will feel the bitter cold, sub zero temperatures.

If the forecast for Des Moines holds on Thursday morning, and they drop to their forecast temperature of -12 degrees, this would be the coldest temperature ever recorded this early in the season.

Meanwhile, places as far south as Kansas and Missouri will bottom out in the 20s.

Afternoon temperatures won't help much as temperatures will stay below freezing for millions Thursday afternoon. Temperatures across portions of the Midwest will run 20-25 degrees above average. Green Bay, Detroit and Milwaukee could all break records for coldest high temperatures.

Even places as far south as Oklahoma City will struggle to make it above freezing.

The widespread freezing temperatures will extend well into the mid-South and eastward into the Ohio Valley.

Friday:Friday morning the cold dips even further south and east. The 20s will be felt as far south as the Texas Panhandle and Little Rock. The Midwest and Ohio Valley will largely start the day with temperatures in the teens. And even the busy I-95 corridor will wake up in the low 20s on Friday morning.

Baltimore, Philadelphia and even New York City could break record lows Friday morning.

The Northeast will struggle to make it above freezing Friday afternoon. While the Midwest and Plains begin to "warm up," temperatures will still only be in the 20s for afternoon highs.

Will There Be Any Snow?

I'm glad you asked! This front will be on the drier side, however, there will be a little snow possible for the extreme northern tier of the country ahead of the cold front for parts of the Midwest, Ohio Valley and interior portions of the Northeast. Most areas outside the Great Lakes snowbelts shouldn't pick up more than a dusting from this.

The first full week of meteorological winter is here, living up to its name.

Jennifer Grayis a weather and climate writer for weather.com. She has been covering some of the world's biggest weather and climate stories for the last two decades.

First Week Of Meteorological Winter Will Bring Record Cold To Millions Across The U.S.

As if the Thanksgiving blast of cold air wasn't enough, an even colder shot of arctic air will dive into the country by the end of the w...
Michigan State finalizes deal to hire ex-Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald to replace Jonathan Smith

Michigan State has secured its replacement for Jonathan Smith.

The Spartans finalized a five-year deal to hire Pat Fitzgerald as their next head coach on Monday afternoon, according toYahoo Sports' Ross Dellenger. Themove came just one day after Michigan State fired Smith, though they were reportedly locked in on Fitzgerald for the job almost immediately.

A new era begins in East Lansing!Welcome home, Coach Fitzgerald!pic.twitter.com/Ds77loJOlf

— Michigan State Football (@MSU_Football)December 1, 2025

"I am honored to be named the head football coach at Michigan State University," said Fitzgerald said in a statement. "I'd like to thank President Guskiewicz and athletics director Batt for this opportunity. This is a program with a deep and storied tradition, a passionate fan base, and a commitment to excellence that extends far beyond the football field. What excited me most about this opportunity was the vision for what Michigan State can be for years to come. We will restore tradition, and I'm eager to earn the trust of our players, alumni, and fans while competing at the highest level."

The job will mark Fitzgerald's first since he was fired from Northwestern ahead of the 2023 campaign following a hazing scandal within the program. Fitzgerald spent 17 seasons with the Wildcats, and he had three 10-win seasons there before finishing with a 110-101 record.

Fitzgerald was fired in the summer of 2023, shortly after he was initially put on a two-week suspension after the hazing allegations were first made public. He reached an undisclosed settlement with the university in August afterfiling a wrongful termination lawsuit, and he said in a statement at the time that it was proventhat he did not know about the hazing allegationswhile he was head coach.

Northwestern went just 4-10 over Fitzgerald's final two seasons, and 1-11 in 2022. They've since hired David Braun to replace him, and he's led the Wildcats over the past three seasons.

Fitzgerald will now enter just his second head coaching job in college football and take over for Smith, who struggled during his two seasons with the Spartans. The team went just 4-8 this season, marking its second losing campaign since Smith took over after a six-year run at Oregon State. Smith finished with a 9-15 record in East Lansing.

Though Fitzgerald has been away from the game for a few years, there's no doubt he knows the Big Ten landscape well and is still a very capable coach for Michigan State — especially during an offseason where so many top jobs have been open throughout the Power Four conferences. Now he'll have to try and quickly get the Spartans back to the top of the conference, a place they haven't been consistently in years.

Michigan State finalizes deal to hire ex-Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald to replace Jonathan Smith

Michigan State has secured its replacement for Jonathan Smith. The Spartans finalized a five-year deal to hire P...
Charles Barkley, Dick Vitale to join forces on 2 college basketball broadcasts, including Vitale's first NCAA tournament game

The partnership between TNT Sports and ESPN is bringing a pair of basketball icons together. Charles Barkley and Dick Vitale will pair up to call two college basketball games this season — one in the regular season and one in the NCAA tournament. ESPN announced the news Monday.

Barkley and Vitale will first work together Dec. 13 when No. 18 Kentucky hosts No. 22 Indiana for a broadcast on ESPN. Dave O'Brien will call play-by-play for that game while Barkley and Vitale offer color analysis.

They'll work again together to call a First Four NCAA tournament game in March that will be broadcast on truTV. The play-by-play announcer for that game has not been announced.

Dick Vitale will pair up with Charles Barkley to call two college basketball games this season.

Vitale has been the voice of ESPN's college basketball coverage since the network's inception in 1979. With CBS holding the rights to the NCAA tournament, Vitale's never called a tournament game.

But CBS partnered with TNT Sports to expand its tournament coverage in recent years. And ESPN and Turner Sports have partnered for multiple deals, includingthe high-profile arrangement for ESPN to carry TNT's beloved NBA studio show "Inside the NBA"starting this season.

With that, the door opened for the Barkley-Vitale pairing announced Monday. Barkley has been a mainstay of TNT Sports' NCAA tournament studio coverage alongside his "Inside the NBA" co-hosts Ernie Johnson and Kenny Smith. Now he'll work the game broadcast mic alongside Vitale.

Together at last

Barkley and Vitale have long wanted to work together. They both spoke about their desire to team up on the air fora 2013 interviewwith Sports Illustrated's Richard Deitsch.

"I told these guys one of my goals is to do a game with Dick Vitale," Barkley told Deitsch. "I would love to do a game with Dick Vitale because I think he has been great for college basketball. It'd be good for the game."

Vitale shared similar a similar sentiment with Deitsch.

"Both of us have a love for the game and it would be a lot of fun," Vitale said. "You never know what will come out of his mouth, and I like to think my energy and enthusiasm would jump out with Charles."

Vitale, 86, has stepped away from broadcasting on multiple occasions in recent years across repeated bouts with cancer. After beingdeclared cancer-free in January,Vitale returned to the micon Nov. 4 for a game between Texas and Duke.

Charles Barkley, Dick Vitale to join forces on 2 college basketball broadcasts, including Vitale's first NCAA tournament game

The partnership between TNT Sports and ESPN is bringing a pair of basketball icons together. Charles Barkley and Dick Vit...

 

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