Hundreds of residents began returning to their homes at Hong Kong's Wang Fuk Court, five months after a devastating fire killed 168 people.
Authorities are allowing residents three-hour windows to collect belongings, with safety measures in place due to severe structural damage in many flats.
Many residents face emotional trauma and uncertainty, as the government plans to buy back affected apartments rather than rebuild the complex.
Could another Wang Fuk Court disaster happen in other aging Hong Kong estates with similar renovation schemes?
Beyond individual arrests, how will Hong Kong fix the systemic corruption that fueled its deadliest fire?
Will the government's buy-back offer truly allow thousands of displaced families to rebuild their lives?
Is demolishing the fire-ravaged towers a real solution or a way to bury a massive system failure?
What future awaits the traumatized residents of the one undamaged block, left behind amidst the ruins?
With 168 dead, will the multiple investigations deliver justice or just scapegoats for a systemic breakdown?