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Police enlist minorities to counter rise in crimes

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Police are reaching out to the city's ethnic minority communities to tackle the rising number of arrests of non-Chinese suspects.

The new initiative, known as Project Connect, is seeking to build upon success in Yuen Long which has bucked the citywide trend. Arrests of ethnic minorities fell to 345 last year from 377 in 2010 even though the district has the city's biggest minority population.

The decline came even as the number of non-ethnic Chinese arrested citywide rose to 4,010 last year from 3,795 in 2010.

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Chief inspector Wong Wai-shun, the Yuen Long police community relations officer who is overseeing the project, said it is helping improve communications between community members of all races and the police by inviting ethnic minorities to teach officers about their language and culture.

The district has also appointed 16 cultural advisers - representatives of the Filipino, Nepalese, Pakistani, Nigerian and Indonesian communities - to spread the crime-prevention message.

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While most arrests involved petty crimes such as theft, fighting, drug offences and criminal damage, Wong said some cases stemmed from simple misunderstandings between local and non-Chinese residents and could be avoided.

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