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RC2DS8A45OPG A view of a cage home unit, a type of housing that has become increasingly rare in Hong Kong due to its harsh conditions, now largely replaced by "coffin" homes, in Hong Kong, China, July 10, 2024. Housing is famously cramped in the Asian financial hub of Hong Kong, thanks to sky-high property prices. The former British colony, ranked as the world's most unaffordable city for a 14th consecutive year by survey company Demographia, has one of the world's highest rates of inequality. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu SEARCH "SIU HONG KONG HOUSING" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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RC2DS8ACFA2R A man lies in a cage home unit, a type of housing that has become increasingly rare in Hong Kong due to its harsh conditions, now largely replaced by "coffin" homes, in Hong Kong, China, July 10, 2024. Housing is famously cramped in the Asian financial hub of Hong Kong, thanks to sky-high property prices. The former British colony, ranked as the world's most unaffordable city for a 14th consecutive year by survey company Demographia, has one of the world's highest rates of inequality. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu SEARCH "SIU HONG KONG HOUSING" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES.
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GM1E92L032O01 A view of a tiny kitchen attached to a tiny bathroom inside an 80 square-foot (8 square metre) sub-divided flat of Michelle Wong, which she rents for HK$3,000 ($387) per month at Sham Shui Po, one of the oldest districts in Hong Kong February 4, 2013. With more than 200,000 people currently on waiting lists for subsidised public housing, droves have downsized or moved into factory buildings, sub-divided "slaughtered" flats that can accommodate multiple families, or moved into "cage homes", wire-mesh hutches stacked on top of each other in crowded rooms. Picture taken February 4, 2013. REUTERS/Bobby Yip (CHINA - Tags: BUSINESS REAL ESTATE)
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GM1E92L032M01 Michelle Wong, a single mother, plays with her two-year-old daughter in the bedroom of an 80 square-foot (8 square metre) sub-divided flat, which she rents for HK$3,000 ($387) per month at Sham Shui Po, one of the oldest districts in Hong Kong February 4, 2013. With more than 200,000 people currently on waiting lists for subsidised public housing, droves have downsized or moved into factory buildings, sub-divided "slaughtered" flats that can accommodate multiple families, or moved into "cage homes", wire-mesh hutches stacked on top of each other in crowded rooms. Picture taken February 4, 2013. REUTERS/Bobby Yip (CHINA - Tags: BUSINESS REAL ESTATE)
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GM1E92L032L01 Michelle Wong, a single mother, plays with her two-year-old daughter in the bedroom of an 80 square-foot (8 square metre) sub-divided flat, which she rents for HK$3,000 ($387) per month at Sham Shui Po, one of the oldest districts in Hong Kong, February 4, 2013. With more than 200,000 people currently on waiting lists for subsidised public housing, droves have downsized or moved into factory buildings, sub-divided "slaughtered" flats that can accommodate multiple families, or moved into "cage homes", wire-mesh hutches stacked on top of each other in crowded rooms. Picture taken February 4, 2013. REUTERS/Bobby Yip (CHINA - Tags: BUSINESS REAL ESTATE TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY)
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GM1E92L032001 A general view of old residential flats, which contain sub-divided units, at Sham Shui Po, one of the oldest districts in Hong Kong February 4, 2013. With more than 200,000 people currently on waiting lists for subsidised public housing, droves have downsized or moved into factory buildings, sub-divided "slaughtered" flats that can accommodate multiple families, or moved into "cage homes", wire-mesh hutches stacked on top of each other in crowded rooms. Picture taken February 4, 2013. REUTERS/Bobby Yip (CHINA - Tags: BUSINESS REAL ESTATE)
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GM1E92L031Z01 A general view of old residential flats, which contain sub-divided units, at Sham Shui Po, one of the oldest districts in Hong Kong February 4, 2013. With more than 200,000 people currently on waiting lists for subsidised public housing, droves have downsized or moved into factory buildings, sub-divided "slaughtered" flats that can accommodate multiple families, or moved into "cage homes", wire-mesh hutches stacked on top of each other in crowded rooms. Picture taken February 4, 2013. REUTERS/Bobby Yip (CHINA - Tags: BUSINESS REAL ESTATE)
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GM1E92L031X01 Door bells for three sub-divided units are seen inside an old residential flat in Hong Kong February 4, 2013. With more than 200,000 people currently on waiting lists for subsidised public housing, droves have downsized or moved into factory buildings, sub-divided "slaughtered" flats that can accommodate multiple families, or moved into "cage homes", wire-mesh hutches stacked on top of each other in crowded rooms. Picture taken February 4, 2013. REUTERS/Bobby Yip (CHINA - Tags: BUSINESS REAL ESTATE)
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GM1E92L031501 A door bell for three sub-divided units is seen inside an old residential flat in Hong Kong February 4, 2013. With more than 200,000 people currently on waiting lists for subsidised public housing, droves have downsized or moved into factory buildings, sub-divided "slaughtered" flats that can accommodate multiple families, or moved into "cage homes", wire-mesh hutches stacked on top of each other in crowded rooms. Picture taken February 4, 2013. REUTERS/Bobby Yip (CHINA - Tags: REAL ESTATE BUSINESS)
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GM1E47H09T201 Lam Ping-kuen waits for dinner in front of a small cage in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H09T001 Kong Siu-kau waits for dinner in front of a small cage in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H09LY01 Kong Siu-kau waits for dinner in a small cage in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H09IP01 Yan Chi-keung sleeps in a small cage in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H09IN01 A man plays cards in a small cage while waiting for the dinner in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H098401 Tai Lun-po sleeps in a small cage in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H094H02 A man burns incense next to a small cage in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H08VD02 Men eat next to small cages in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H08Q401 Kong Siu-kau eats in front of a small cage in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H08HG01 A man reads newspaper while waiting for dinner in a small tenement flat in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H085F01 A man burns incense while sitting in a small cage in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H07ZS01 Yan Chi-keung sleeps in a small cage in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H07S601 Lam Ping-kuen waits for the dinner in front of a small cage in Hong Kong's Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1E47H07EO01 Tai Lun-po sleeps in a small cage in Tai Kok Tsui district July 16, 2008. In older districts like Tai Kok Tsui, hundreds of elderly men still reside in caged cubicles in cramped, old tenement flats which house up to 12 individuals in often squalid conditions. Hong Kong on Wednesday announced a $1.4 billion inflation relief package for low-income groups, but for these downtrodden "cage-men" living in tiny cubicles, the measures gave little comfort. REUTERS/Victor Fraile (CHINA)
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GM1DRWERJIAA Housed pigeons caught by officers from Hong Kong's Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department are seen through a cage at a village in Hong Kong February 2, 2006. Preliminary lab tests for the feared H5N1 bird flu came up negative for three people in Hong Kong who were isolated after a chicken they had kept was found to have been infected with the deadly virus. REUTERS/Paul Yeung
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GM1DRWEQCUAA A housed pigeon caught by officers from Hong Kong's Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department is seen through a cage in Hong Kong February 2, 2006. Preliminary lab tests for the feared H5N1 bird flu came up negative for three people in Hong Kong who were isolated after a chicken they had kept was found to have been infected with the deadly virus. REUTERS/Paul Yeung
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PBEAHUKOOAS Oscar-winning actor Nicolas Cage has sold his personal comic book collection, including a copy of Superman's 1938 pulp debut, at auction for more than $1.6 million, organizers of the sale conducted by the Heritage Auctions house of Dallas in conjunction with the Mint of Kansas City, Mo said October 11, 2002. Cage attends a news conference to promote his new movie 'Windtalkers' in Hong Kong on June 24.
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RP1DRIGWGBAA "Cage home" protesters tie portraits of Hong Kong leader Tung Chee-hwa (R) and top housing officials on their forheads during a demonstration outside the government headquarters October 4. The protesters are demanding to be resettled in public housing estates. Hong Kong leader Tung Chee-hwa, facing the territory's worst economic crisis in decades, sets out a programme this week for dealing with an array of problems in his annual policy speech.BY/TAN/AA
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RP1DRIGVFGAA An elderly protester holding a sign emphasizing the need for safe shelters, demonstrate outside the government headquarters in Hong Kong October 4. The protesters demanded to be resettled in public housing estates. Hong Kong leader Tung Chee-hwa, facing this territory's worst economic crisis in decades, sets out a programme this week for dealing with an array of problems in his annual policy speech.BY/TAN/WS
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RP1DRIGUZXAB A "cage home" protester ties a portrait of Hong Kong leader Tung Chee-hwa on his forhead during a demonstration outside the government headquarters, demanding to be resettled in a public housing estate, October 4. Hong Kong leader Tung Chee-hwa, facing this territory's worst economic crisis in decades, set out a programme this week for dealing with an array of problems in his annual policy speech.BY/TAN/AA
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PBEAHUMMPDF Chu Pak-fatt, 74, sits in his "cage" apartment in Sham Shui Po, one of Hong Kong's densest housing estates. Chu and many others living below the poverty line in Hong Kong, live in flats divided into cages just big enough to sleep in but not to sit, let alone stand in. Picture taken 5JUN97.
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Total de Resultados: 30

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