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Assailants have stormed a mahjong parlour on Yi Pei Square. Photo: Google Maps

Police hunt for 7 assailants who broke into, vandalised 2 Hong Kong mahjong parlours in alleged attempt to collect debt

  • Four thugs break into parlour on Yi Pei Square after smashing glass door with baseball bat before 12.15am, police say
  • Three others storm adjacent parlour with batons and a knife, damaging mahjong tables, two chairs, a computer, a television and a cabinet

Hong Kong police are searching for at least seven assailants who stormed and vandalised two mahjong parlours in Tsuen Wan in an apparent attempt to collect a debt.

Four thugs broke into a parlour on Yi Pei Square after smashing the glass door with a baseball bat shortly before 12.15am on Monday, according to police.

“Initial investigations showed perpetrators demanded staff repay a debt. When their demand was not met, they resorted to damaging the shop,” a source familiar with the case said.

The insider added a female employee’s hand was injured by flying glass shards after assailants broke several mahjong tables and a television on the premises.

The woman, 59, did not require hospital treatment, he noted.

Officers from the Tsuen Wan criminal investigation unit have launched a probe into a vandalism case at two mahjong parlours. Photo: Warton Li

Police said three other assailants simultaneously burst into an adjacent parlour with batons and a knife, damaging mahjong tables, two chairs, a computer, a television and a cabinet.

The seven, who were wearing caps and masks, fled before officers arrived at the scene following a call from a staff member at around 12.15am, according to the force.

Officers from the Tsuen Wan criminal investigation unit are handling the case. No arrests have been made so far.

In the third quarter of last year, three mahjong parlours in the Kowloon West region were targeted amid a money dispute between two triad gangs.

In July, more than 10 thugs broke into a Mong Kok parlour in an attempt to collect a HK$60 million debt from one of its owners, known as “Fei Kin” and suspected to be a member of the Wo Shing Wo triad.

More than 30 people stormed another mahjong parlour, owned by Fei Kin, in Sham Shui Po in September.

About a week later, more than 20 assailants broke into a mahjong parlour in Cheung Sha Wan in apparent retaliation for the previous attack.

Police handled 5,298 reports of criminal damage across the city last year, a 2.4 per cent rise from 5,172 cases logged in 2022.

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