With a population of nearly 7.5 million and very little developable land remaining, Hong Kong has become the least affordable housing market, making so-called 'coffin cubicles' common. United Nations have condemned these nightmarish cage-apartments as an insult to human dignity but according to the Society for Community Organisation, for some 200,000 people it's still the only alternative.
With a population of nearly 7.5 million and very little developable land remaining, Hong Kong has become the least affordable housing market, making so-called 'coffin cubicles' common. United Nations have condemned these nightmarish cage-apartments as an insult to human dignity but according to the Society for Community Organisation, for some 200,000 people it's still the only alternative.
With a population of nearly 7.5 million and very little developable land remaining, Hong Kong has become the least affordable housing market, making so-called 'coffin cubicles' common. United Nations have condemned these nightmarish cage-apartments as an insult to human dignity but according to the Society for Community Organisation, for some 200,000 people it's still the only alternative.
With a population of nearly 7.5 million and very little developable land remaining, Hong Kong has become the least affordable housing market, making so-called 'coffin cubicles' common. United Nations have condemned these nightmarish cage-apartments as an insult to human dignity but according to the Society for Community Organisation, for some 200,000 people it's still the only alternative.
With a population of nearly 7.5 million and very little developable land remaining, Hong Kong has become the least affordable housing market, making so-called 'coffin cubicles' common. United Nations have condemned these nightmarish cage-apartments as an insult to human dignity but according to the Society for Community Organisation, for some 200,000 people it's still the only alternative.
With a population of nearly 7.5 million and very little developable land remaining, Hong Kong has become the least affordable housing market, making so-called 'coffin cubicles' common. United Nations have condemned these nightmarish cage-apartments as an insult to human dignity but according to the Society for Community Organisation, for some 200,000 people it's still the only alternative.
With a population of nearly 7.5 million and very little developable land remaining, Hong Kong has become the least affordable real estate market, making so-called 'coffin cubicles' common. United Nations have condemned these nightmarish living spaces as "an insult to human dignity," but according to the Society for Community Organisation, for some 200,000 people, it's still the only alternative.
Four men were arrested on Thursday after law enforcement officials seized about 119 pounds of cocaine and 100 bundles of cash.