Kai Loeffelbein

Photographer
Location: Berlin
Nationality: German
Biography:  Kai Lí¶ffelbein (born in 1981) is an freelance photographer, currently residing in Hannover,
Germany. He has studied political science in Berlin and later photojournalism and documentary photography in Hannover and worked in various countries... MORE
Private Story
Hidden Hong Kong
Copyright Kai Loeffelbein 2024
Updated Mar 2014
Topics Documentary, Multimedia, Photography, photojournalism, Video

 

 

In Hong Kong, one of the world’s wealthiest metropolises, there are around 130,000 people living in cages. While ever more luxury shops open just a few streets away, many inhabitants can no longer afford the increasing rents. To avoid living on the streets, they move into wire cages – their entire world reduced to a few square metres, a life shared with strangers.   

Landlords can charge as much as they like.  About one fifth of the cages are occupied by new arrivals from mainland China, dreaming of an escape from their poverty and trying their luck in the prosperous mega city. One hundred and fifty people are permitted to immigrate every day. For many however, the cages have become more than just a temporary shelter: elderly people, drug addicts, former convicts, the mentally disturbed and day labourers often live here for decades. 

Hong Kong’s poor people are struggling day in and day out to keep their heads above water. It is most scornful to see economic development bringing social inequality. These deprived people cannot enjoy their economic success. These people have been snubbed and have fallen into oblivion.

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