Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Messages of calamity concern are rarely ever helpful
Mint Mumbai
|December 05, 2025
The fire that engulfed as many as eight tower blocks at a housing estate in Hong Kong last week was beyond the imagination even of Hollywood's screenwriters.
The towers’ netting, which covers Hong Kong buildings like giant mosquito nets when refurbishment is underway, turned out to be made of highly flammable synthetic material. Each of the blocks enveloped by the blaze was 30 storeys high. Even though 2,000 firemen had rushed to the site, it took from Wednesday evening to Friday, 28 November, to douse the fire. At least 151 people died; the city declared three days of mourning earlier this week.
I happened to be in Hong Kong last week on a work trip. Yet, I was unprepared for the flurry of texts I received from friends, either commiserating about the tragedy or concerned for my safety. It was another reminder that in the age of 24-hour television and social media, bad news not only travels fast but has a distortive effect.
The public housing complex in Tai Po was some 30km away from the financial district where the office I was visiting was located. The telecasts that reach us in our living rooms and via horrifying videos on social media connect us, but also leave us disconnected. After all, even a cursory reading of the fire's details would have made clear that the calamity occurred in a gargantuan housing complex built by the government, far from the city centre where most business travellers work and stay.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 05, 2025-Ausgabe von Mint Mumbai.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
Her money, her control, her future
In India, financial decisions are still largely managed by men, fathers, husbands, or other family members.
1 mins
March 09, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Bulls not buying the dip as caution rules
When stock markets tank, intrepid investors troop in to buy the dip.
2 mins
March 09, 2026
Mint Mumbai
WHY INSTAMART IS PLAYING NOICE
The q-commerce outfit is trying to become an FMCG company inside a delivery app with its new F&B private label
8 mins
March 09, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Aramco shares surge most since 2023
Saudi Aramco jumped the most since May 2023 on Sunday as the Iran war entered its second week, prompting supply disruptions that may send oil prices higher when global markets reopen.
1 min
March 09, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Parts firms take safe lane on green trip
Auto component makers are pitching powertrain-agnostic portfolios as the best way to address uncertainty about which technologies will dominate roads amid the shift away from combustion engines.
3 mins
March 09, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Sembcorp, Hexa circle Enel's India green unit
Sale likely at $300 mn enterprise value; deal after sale to Waree fell through
3 mins
March 09, 2026
Mint Mumbai
New MF fee rules to hit small agents
A regulatory overhaul of how commissions are paid will shake up the segment estimated to account for about half of India's ₹81 trillion in mutual fund assets: small distributors.
2 mins
March 09, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Jaquar eyes scaling lighting biz revenue
Bathroom and lighting solutions provider Jaquar Group is targeting to scale its lighting business revenue to ₹1,700 crore in the next three years, according to a senior company official.
1 min
March 09, 2026
Mint Mumbai
A bitter harvest for wheat as war pops export dreams
Exporters are wary of committing to large shipments as freight rates remain volatile
2 mins
March 09, 2026
Mint Mumbai
Nearly every third investor is now a woman, small-town India leads
The Indian stock market is morphing from a solo act into a duet as women rapidly expand their footprint in capital markets.
3 mins
March 09, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
