In a development that has sent tremors through the gin-soaked corners of my liver, Hong Kong authorities have actually arrested someone. A suspect, apparently. For the fire. The deadly one. The one that turned a building into a vertical barbecue pit while the city's security lockdown made sure nobody could run away without a permit.
Let us dissect this pearl of police work, shall we? The suspect, a 36-year-old man whose name I cannot pronounce without spitting tonic water across my keyboard, was hauled in for questioning. Charged with arson. For the blaze that claimed at least three lives and injured a dozen others. The fire that erupted in a residential unit in the New Territories, sending plumes of smoke into the sky like a signal flare for bureaucratic incompetence.
Now, I am no detective. My investigative toolkit consists of a battered trench coat, a flask of Gordon's, and a profound distrust for anyone who uses the phrase "security lockdown" without irony. But even I can spot the absurdity in this situation. The city is under a lockdown that would make a prison warden blush. Everyone is tracked, monitored, and scanned. Yet a fire breaks out, and it takes weeks to find a suspect? This is not policing. This is a satire written by Kafka after a bender.
Let us not forget the context, dear reader. Hong Kong has been in a state of heightened security, a term that usually means "we are watching you watch us watch you." The lockdown was tightened after the fire, with authorities citing the need to prevent "secondary incidents." Because nothing screams "prevention" like sealing off a building where people just died from a fire that could have been prevented by functional smoke alarms and windows that actually open.
I imagine the interrogation. A windowless room. A single light bulb swinging. Two constables in crisp uniforms. One suspect, looking like a man who just realised he left the oven on. "Why did you do it?" they ask. The suspect shrugs. "I was bored during the lockdown." The constables nod. They understand. We all understand. Lockdowns make lunatics of us all.
But here is the real fire, the one no one is pointing a hose at. The fire itself was a symptom. A symptom of a city on edge, of a population trapped in their homes, of a mental health crisis drowning in hand sanitizer and loneliness. The arrest is a performative truncheon, a not-so-subtle message that the state is in control. But control is an illusion, a trick of the light, a card up a sleeve that is already on fire.
Let us raise a glass to the suspect, whoever he is. He might be guilty. He might be innocent. He might be a scapegoat on which to tack this tragedy so the system can pretend it works. In a city where every move is monitored, where cameras lurk in every corner, where the very air is thick with surveillance, the fact that it took this long to find a suspect is more incriminating than any confession.
So here is to the fire. The lockdown. The arrest. The endless cycle of tragedy and farce. My gin is running low, which is the only true catastrophe I can verify. The rest is just smoke and mirrors. And tonight, Hong Kong is full of smoke.








