Hong Kong police investigate acid attacks

HONG KONG — Hong Kongers ventured out unafraid today, as police searched for suspects behind a third acid attack that injured 24 people in one of the city’s most densely populated shopping districts. Nearly 100 people have been injured in the assaults so far.

The latest attack Monday night dominated headlines in Hong Kong, with several newspapers showing photos of victims washing off the acid on the roadside.

Police said a bottle filled with a corrosive liquid was hurled onto a crowd in the busy Mong Kok district, injuring 24 people. None of the victims, aged 4 to 49, were seriously burned.

It is the third such attack in six months in the neighborhood.

On the same street last month, 30 people suffered burns when two plastic bottles filled with acid were thrown down into a crowd. Another 46 were injured in a similar attack in the same neighborhood in December.

There were no signs the attacks had sparked widespread panic in the city of 7 million, as locals mostly went about their business. But in Mong Kok — which means “busy corner” in Chinese and is a shopping hot spot that attracts thousands of people daily — some shoppers were staying away.

“I thought the attack would be stopped, but it happened again,” one of the victims surnamed Leung was quoted as saying in Hong Kong’s Ming Pao Daily News. “I always go to Mong Kok, but from now on I’ll never go to that area again.”

Leung suffered burns on her neck and back, according to Ming Pao.

Hong Kong leader Donald Tsang condemned the attack, saying it was “cold blooded and evil” and that the assailant was “scum of the society.”

Police superintendent Edward Leung was quoted as saying in the South China Morning Post today that it was possible the same person had carried out all three attacks.

Leung said in a radio interview today that officers were reviewing surveillance footage taken by cameras recently installed to monitor the area of the attacks. But he said it wasn’t immediately clear whether the assailant would be identified because some of the images are too dark.

Investigators have also posted a $116,097 reward for information leading to an arrest.

If convicted, the assailant would be charged with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, which has a maximum penalty of life imprisonment, Leung said earlier.

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