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Notorious Hong Kong gangster Yip Kai-foon, who inspired hit film Trivisa, dies in hospital

Yip Kai-foon was known for wielding AK-47s while robbing jewellery stores in the 1980s

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Yip Kai-foon being carried into an ambulance in 2009.

Yip Kai-foon, a notorious Hong Kong gangster known for holding up jewellery stores in the 1980s with an AK-47, has died in a public hospital, aged 55.

One legislator remembered the violent criminal as a committed advocate of prisoners’ rights, and a “loving and optimistic man”.

Formerly Hong Kong’s most wanted man, Yip was serving a 36-year stint in the maximum-security Stanley Prison for possession of firearms and escaping custody in 1989.

He had been in custody since 1996, when he was rearrested after a shoot-out in Kennedy Town, during which he was shot in the spine, leaving him wheelchair-bound.

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Yip publicly expressed remorse for his crimes in 2010.

“I definitely regret the wrong things I did in the past. My family experienced great trouble, and had to bear the burden and the worrying. Society was also hurt,” he wrote in a five-page letter.

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It was understood that Yip, who became a Christian in 2004, had cancer and needed regular care in prison and public hospitals.

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