Malaysian injured by falling concrete in Hong Kong’s Tsim Sha Tsui

A Malaysian man’s first day of business in Hong Kong’s buzzing Tsim Sha Tsui neighborhood turned into a terrifying ordeal.

Ng Shu Lin, 44, was struck by a piece of masonry that fell from the Yau Lai Building on Nathan Road just hours after arriving in the city on July 4 and struck him in the mind.

Ng was traveling to a World Filial Piety conference when the event occurred in a busy place known for its hordes of tall buildings and high foot traffic.

According to his companion, Yap Shy Cuan, 48, Ng was walking along the busy city when the event happened.

” It was surprising. People rushed to help him after the effects knocked him to the surface. Ng has undergone two therapies, but there is still a piece of masonry that cannot be found and taken out.

In a phone interview with Bernama, Yep stated that” the second surgery was on Sunday ( July 7 ), and he is anticipated to be discharged by Tuesday ( July 9 ).

Ng, who is already stable but also poor and receiving care at Hong Kong Baptist Hospital, intends to speak with a solicitor after leaving to look into his legal options.

Ng’s event caught the attention of the local media, and reports from the picture reported that some practical fragments were discovered on the pavement, with obvious cracks on the canopy of the building, even though no rebar was found.

The Yau Lai Building, which has been occupied since 1963 and is now 61 years older, had to be removed using a rope to remove various loose practical items that posed a risk of falling from it.

A legal notice for a building’s communal areas was issued sooner, and the building’s collective areas were the subject of the building’s notification, and the inspection was carried out in accordance with it. – Bernama