Newstral
Article
South China Morning Post on 2019-05-03 01:30
Can a pre-lease of 20,000 public columbarium niches address Hong Kong’s grim problem of lack of space for the dead?
Related news
Private columbarium operators face stricter financial regulations as government tries to address Hong Kong’s shortage of urn spacesSouth China Morning Post
Hong Kong’s Northern Metropolis: what bold ideas will advisory panel of ‘stakeholders’ give to realise plans? Several say relook land use, create better niches for tech and businessSouth China Morning Post
Hong Kong’s ‘coffin homes’: the grim reality of life in city’s subdivided flatsSouth China Morning Post
- SHong Kong’s mid-sized developers seek to create markets in unlikely niches to survive city’s worst economic slump on recordscmp.com
Deadly work? Silent tributes for fallen a grim reminder of need for change at Hong Kong’s construction sites, as industry urges safety boostSouth China Morning Post
Hong Kong’s John Lee vows to adhere to law, seek legal advice on High Court ruling preventing government’s invalidation of more than 20,000 Covid jab exemptionsSouth China Morning Post
- SHong Kong’s love of meat risks leaving the city on the wrong side of progressscmp.com
Transport industry players call for revamp of Hong Kong’s ride-hailing market, upgrade of taxi fleetSouth China Morning Post
- SMental health, the victim on all sides of Hong Kong’s extradition bill crisisscmp.com
First case of multidrug-resistant fungal species Candida auris recorded at Hong Kong’s Princess Margaret HospitalSouth China Morning Post
‘Face the will of the people’, Taiwan’s main political parties urge Hong Kong’s governmentSouth China Morning Post
Looking back at some of Hong Kong’s deadliest blazes in recent decadesSouth China Morning Post
Hong Kong’s opposition lawmakers warn of legal action over controversial extradition billSouth China Morning Post
Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific to add more women and Chinese talent at the top of managementSouth China Morning Post
Hong Kong’s largest pay TV operator i-Cable apologises over poor handling of lay-offsSouth China Morning Post
Beijing slams UK judge who quit Hong Kong’s top court for ‘slandering’ rule of lawSouth China Morning Post
Out-of-control mobile crane ploughs into vehicles near Hong Kong’s Peak Tram terminusSouth China Morning Post
‘More elderly people will die’: grim facts behind Hong Kong’s Covid-19 death surgeSouth China Morning Post
Coronavirus: Hong Kong’s visually impaired deprived of Covid-19 information with half of Chinese-language news apps inaccessible, NGO findsSouth China Morning Post
Hong Kong’s Hospital Authority to review maintenance of equipment and facilities after revealing slab of concrete fell onto bedSouth China Morning Post