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Hong Kong police search country park for kidnappers

Published: 30 Apr 2015 - 06:44 pm | Last Updated: 14 Jan 2022 - 12:39 pm

 

 

 


Hong Kong--Hundreds of heavily armed officers are searching one of Hong Kong's rural country parks in a massive operation to hunt down six men who fled with millions in ransom money after a kidnap, local media have reported.
The suspects, who took 29-year-old Queenie Rosita Law from her home, freed her after family members paid a reported HK$28 million ($3.61 million).
They had initially demanded up to HK$50 million for the release of Law, the granddaughter of late textiles tycoon, Law Ting-pong.
Footage from Cable TV showed uniformed officers descending on a village in the eastern part of the city in the early hours of Thursday, while hundreds of heavily armed officers have also been searching Ma On Shan Country Park since Tuesday, the South China Morning Post said.
"My spirit and my body have not been harmed because of this kidnapping," Law told reporters during a press conference late Thursday.
She said she could not give details about the case as police investigations were ongoing.
Roadblocks have been set up and helicopters and marine vessels were deployed in the city-wide manhunt, which began after Law was released.
"The investigations for the case is ongoing," a police spokeswoman told AFP Thursday.
She said the search operation was taking place "(all) over the territory", without giving further detail.
"Arresting them is just a matter of time," an unnamed police source told the SCMP.
The southern Chinese city of seven million people is for the most part considered to be safe, with violent crimes in 2014 falling almost 10 percent from 2013. Robberies also fell 38.2 percent to 309 cases in 2014, compared to figures from 2013.

AFP