Hong Kong Arrests 21 in Renovation Graft Crackdown
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Hong Kong officials arrested 21 people involved in the renovation of two housing estates in an anti-graft crackdown on building construction and maintenance, the city’s anti-corruption agency said on Jan. 2.
The operation by the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) came after unsafe materials were found in the debris of a residential fire in the Tai Po District that killed at least 161 in November 2025.
The individuals were arrested on suspicion of corruption in relation with two grant renovation projects in the Kwun Tong District, in which they acted as middlemen, project consultants, project contractors, or members of incorporated owners (IO), who are the individual owners of apartments.
According to the ICAC, in one of the projects, the contractor allegedly bribed the project consultant and some IO members through middlemen to secure the $33 million contract.
In the other project, middlemen are accused of collecting proxy statements from apartment owners by corrupt means in order to secure future contracts.
“Building maintenance is closely related to the public and involves multiple stakeholders. The ICAC has always attached great importance to corruption in building maintenance, adopting a three-pronged strategy of law enforcement, systemic prevention and community education in tackling these cases,” the agency stated.
The arrests are unrelated to the fire in Tai Po, the deadliest blaze in Hong Kong in three decades.


