Hong Kong’s Eerie Sky Amazes Onlookers; Xi Jinping Cannot Escape the “Heavenly Noose”

On the evening of November 10, 2025, Hong Kong witnessed an eerie sky phenomenon. When the picture is enlarged, the human-shaped face and hairstyle astonishingly match Xi Jinping.

[People News] On the evening of November 10, 2025, an eerie human-shaped figure appeared amid a fiery-red cloud layer over Hong Kong’s sky. Its silhouette strongly resembled Chinese Communist Party leader Xi Jinping with his head hanging downward and a rope around his neck. Citizens posted the photo on Facebook, instantly igniting the internet. People marveled, “This is unbelievable.” Enlarged carefully, the facial shape and hairstyle of the figure matched Xi Jinping astonishingly. Truly: Hong Kong’s sky was filled with blazing red, and Xi Jinping appeared “hanged by a cloud” in mid-air.

However, just as people had not yet recovered from the shock, on November 26, a sudden massive fire broke out at Hongfuyuan Estate in Tai Po District, New Territories, Hong Kong, making some people feel that the eerie celestial sign on November 10 appeared as though Heaven was trying to indicate something to the people! If that night’s “sky full of blazing red” corresponded to today’s Hong Kong fire, then does the “hanged Xi Jinping image” signify that this fire will become a “noose” tightening around Xi Jinping’s neck…? Based on some astonishing leaks so far, this seems to be coming true?

On November 26, 2025, a massive fire broke out at Hongfuyuan, Tai Po District, New Territories, Hong Kong.

According to explosive reporting from Jiang Feng’s Vision, the official death toll of the towering blaze at Hongfuyuan in Tai Po District was squeezed out like toothpaste to 159 people. But in videos circulating on Twitter, the densely packed body bags tell us that this was, in fact, a complete man-made disaster.

The fire followed the illegal flammable nylon nets used on the exterior and seemed to burn straight across the Shenzhen River, into Zhongnanhai, right up to the doorstep of the First Family. What is even deadlier is that, at this critical moment, a political earthquake took place in Beijing—Central Commission for Discipline Inspection (CCDI) chief Li Xi mysteriously disappeared for more than ten days.

Rumors are rampant that the Party elders have had enough. Taking advantage of this fire, they have joined hands with the military’s Zhang Youxia to activate “Plan B” to reshuffle the Politburo Standing Committee. Xi Jinping is truly frightened this time.

John Lee Suddenly Rebelled

Why did this fire burn so fiercely and so disastrously? Professional analysis sends chills down one’s spine: the protective nets used for exterior maintenance were required by Hong Kong regulations to be made of flame-retardant materials, but as the video showed, the nets caught fire immediately and ballooned in the wind. The burning fire lines drifted into residents’ homes like “toxic rain”—practically perfect fuses.

This requires accountability. The exterior wall maintenance project involved in the fire was handled by Hong Kong–based Hongye Construction. This company has been accused of numerous violations and a long record of misconduct. An investigation by a well-known overseas media outlet hit the nail on the head: the contractor, to cut costs, used cheap non-flame-retardant nylon nets and forged certification reports to deceive the Labour Department. Residents filed 16 complaints about the high fire risk last year. And the result? Nothing happened.

Why wasn’t anything done? Why couldn’t the Labour Department investigate? Because the network of relationships behind this is harder than a firewall.

A Zhihu post with more than 100,000 views was quickly deleted. Netizens dug up that the nylon nets used by Hongye Construction originated from Heze, Shandong. The upstream supplier was a company called Mingli Trading. Pay attention to this detail: corporate registry records show that the company’s registered address is on Qianbanbijie, Xicheng District, Beijing—this was once the Beijing office for Fuzhou City when Xi Jinping served as the Fuzhou Party Secretary.

Even more shocking leaks followed: according to corporate information unearthed by netizens, the company’s legal representative, Peng Lijuan, is said to be the younger sister of “General Peng,” the current “Mother of the Nation.” And the actual operator behind the company, Xu Xingjian, originally a local market director in Heze, Shandong, used his identity as “Peng’s brother-in-law” to complete a Peking University EMBA and transformed into a major tycoon controlling construction material supply channels between Beijing and Hong Kong. There were even revelations suggesting the involvement of the COVID “testing queen” Zhang Shanshan—the younger sister of Xi’s younger brother’s wife. Reportedly, she issued passing lab reports for these deadly substandard materials from her laboratory in Pennsylvania.

The specific familial relationships and business empire mentioned above can only be referred to as “rumors” for now due to the CCP’s black-box operations. But why do such rumors convince people so easily? Because they fit perfectly into the CCP’s political logic of “when one person rises to power, even the chickens and dogs ascend with him.”

Now the trouble has arrived. With so many deaths and Hong Kong’s public fury boiling over, someone must take the fall. According to some sources, Beijing intends to force John Lee to resign to quell public anger and clean the Peng family of involvement.

But this time, John Lee—a former police officer—showed rare defiance. At a press conference on the 3rd, when pressed by foreign media asking, “How do you still have the face to cling to the Chief Executive position?” he replied with a meaningful statement:

“Break down interests and barriers. No matter who is involved, no matter how powerful their background, this must be investigated to the very end.”

Listen to what is implied between the lines. In CCP official language, officials typically only say “act according to the law.” If one emphasizes “no matter who is involved,” it usually means—it already involves someone untouchable.

John Lee was essentially sending a message to Beijing: the materials were brought in by your “imperial relatives,” the money was taken by you, the disaster was caused by you, and now you want to use my head as a scapegoat? No way.

Thus, this fire is no longer merely a livelihood disaster; it has become a life-or-death bargaining chip in a struggle between the Hong Kong government and Beijing, and between local forces and elite power clans.

Is Li Xi Executing a Secret Plan?

While Beijing and Hong Kong are biting each other and John Lee refuses to take the blame, the “King of Hell,” CCDI chief Li Xi, suddenly vanished from public view for more than ten days.

In CCP high-level operations, for a figure of such rank to disappear during a crisis is an extreme anomaly.

There are two completely opposite speculations about Li Xi’s whereabouts, both chilling:

First: Li Xi is in trouble.
Believed that Xi Jinping is dissatisfied with him and is carrying out an internal purge.

Second: Li Xi has defected (or is carrying out a top-secret mission against Xi’s faction).
This version is spreading more widely in overseas intelligence circles and seems more logical.

A source from Beijing claims: Li Xi is currently in the Xishan Command Center, under tight protection by real-power military figure Zhang Youxia. In the underground Xishan command bunker, he is thoroughly investigating what may be the first corruption-without-case scandal since the founding of the PRC—the Peng family’s money-grabbing operations in Hong Kong and Guangdong.

Sounds unbelievable? But do not forget Li Xi’s background—although he is now regarded as Xi’s “knife,” he started in Shaanxi, was Zhao Leji’s secretary-general, and was a key figure personally elevated by Wang Qishan. In the Party’s factional spectrum, he has never been a pure member of Xi’s camp.

Now it seems highly likely he is a deeply planted mole placed beside Xi by the elder faction.

Another chilling detail confirms the brutality of this struggle:

At the same time Li Xi disappeared and was preparing to interrogate key witnesses, overseas media exploded a bombshell: Li Guanglu, the former personal secretary of Ma Xingrui—who had followed him all the way to Xinjiang and served as his office director—suddenly died under mysterious circumstances.

Why a secretary? Do not underestimate Li Guanglu. He started as a police driver. And take note: in CCP officialdom, the person a leader trusts most is often not his deputy, but his driver.

When Ma Xingrui “made money” in Shenzhen and Xinjiang—truckloads of cash transported, billions funneled overseas through underground banks—the one who arranged everything was this driver. In other words, he was a living human money-transport vehicle between the Xi family and the Ma family.

Now, for Li Xi to investigate the case, what he most lacks is witness testimony. As long as Li Guanglu spoke, the Peng family’s dirty accounts in Hong Kong and Xinjiang would immediately be exposed.

So at this critical moment, Li Guanglu’s mysterious death—or rumored “silencing”—is completely logical: Xi’s faction is racing against time, aiming to eliminate the key witness before Li Xi can interrogate him. Because the dead cannot speak.

Xi Jinping appointed Li Xi as “Judge Bao,” intending for him to behead political enemies. But unexpectedly, with the support of Zhang Youxia and the elders, Li Xi’s “execution blade” is now hanging over the necks of Xi’s own family.

This also perfectly explains why John Lee dared to confront Beijing in Hong Kong—because he sensed the shift: the CCDI’s gun is no longer aimed at the Chief Executive but at the imperial relatives.

Hu Jintao Is Fully Deploying Plan B

If we raise the perspective, we will find these are merely tactical moves on the front line. In the eyes of many Beijing watchers, the real strategic command center may lie deeper.

The elderly white-haired man who was forcibly escorted out of the 20th Party Congress closing ceremony—Hu Jintao—may now be fully deploying Plan B. Rumor has it that a secret meeting of the Central Decision-Making and Coordination Body took place just days ago, with Hu Jintao, Wen Jiabao, Li Ruihuan, and other Party elders participating.

At the meeting, Hu Jintao formally proposed: in view of the severe domestic and international situation, he suggested convening the 21st Party Congress early to resolve the succession of the top leader.

This is a direct palace coup maneuver. Wen Jiabao, Li Ruihuan, and Wang Yang all voted in favor. The military, represented by Zhang Youxia, also nodded.

But Xi Jinping’s confidants—Cai Qi, Li Qiang, Ding Xuexiang—held tightly to their voting rights. When the votes were counted, the proposal did not reach the required two-thirds.

Xi thought he had won again, thinking that the elders were still the same group of old cadres who only complain. But this time he was wrong.

After the meeting ended, Hu Jintao said to Zhang Youxia: “They think we only know how to follow procedures? Then we’ll let them know that when we stop following procedures, they will suffer even more.”
This—was Hu Jintao’s Plan B.

Since there are too many opposing votes in the Standing Committee, then reduce the number of opposing votes.

This explains why Chen Weijun is being interrogated harshly. Do not forget, Chen Weijun is not only Ma Xingrui’s “housekeeper,” he is also a trusted aide whom Li Qiang promoted during his time in Zhejiang. His résumé is explicit: Chen Weijun is from Ninghai, Zhejiang; when Li Qiang was governor, he was mayor of Huzhou.

Investigating Chen Weijun directly targets Premier Li Qiang.

Li Xi’s Hong Kong investigation could at any moment send the flames toward Cai Qi, the loudest defender of Xi. Secret China even reported that Cai Qi now faces a terrifying ultimatum—either defect from Xi, or have evidence exposed that he helped cover up the Peng family’s 7-billion-yuan money-laundering operation.

Intelligence shows that Ma Xingrui’s ex-wife, Peng Liyuan’s “white glove,” Rong Li, has been secretly detained by the military disciplinary commission.

She confessed during interrogation: the Peng family used charity foundations and art projects as cover to launder money overseas, totaling as much as 7 billion yuan.

And during this process, who used the power of the General Office of the Central Committee to help destroy evidence, transfer funds, and open pathways? None other than the “Grand Chamberlain” Cai Qi.

Even worse, the case involves a murder.

In September this year, actor Yu Menglong suddenly “fell to his death.” Reports now claim that before he died, he swallowed a USB drive containing evidence of the Cai family’s involvement—including his alleged illegitimate son Xin Qi—in money laundering and “casting couch” scandals.

The opposition now holds this USB drive and Rong Li’s confession, putting a knife directly to Cai Qi’s throat.

Why did Cai Qi suddenly start loudly talking about “anti-corruption, cutting inward with the blade” during public speeches recently? Because he is frightened. He is signaling submission to Zhang Youxia and the elders.

Hu Jintao’s plan is very clear: before the Lunar New Year, at least one State Council–level Politburo Standing Committee member must step down due to “health reasons” or “political problems.”

If Cai Qi defects, Xi Jinping truly becomes isolated. If he refuses, then Cai Qi’s entire family, along with the 7-billion-yuan laundering scandal, will immediately be made public—becoming the last straw that breaks Xi’s regime.△