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When a PLA-trained bomber tried – and failed – to rob a Hong Kong bank

  • The Sham Shui Po branch of Dao Heng Bank was damaged during an attempted robbery in 1985
  • A teller lost her eye in the detonation of ‘primitive’ home-made explosive device

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The damaged branch of the Dao Heng Bank on Lai Chi Kok Road, in 1985. Photo: SCMP
Mercedes Hutton

“Twenty-seven people were hurt yesterday afternoon when a home-made bomb exploded in an attempted bank robbery in Shamshuipo,” reported the South China Morning Post on February 8, 1985. “The blast caused widespread but superficial damage to the ground floor of the Dao Heng Bank branch, knocking its metal doors off their supports and sending debris flying across the junction of Laichikok Road and Nam Cheong Street,” the story continued.

The suspect, “carrying a bulky package wrapped in newspaper” approached a bank teller and “declared a robbery”, the Post reported the following day. “He was waving two electric cord ends from the bomb in his hands.” Police believed that the device was “so primitive” that it blew up “unintention­ally” when the man connected the wires.

“The suspect, who was seriously injured, was being detained [...] in the Queen Elizabeth Hospital’s custodial ward in a fair condi­tion. He has been in a coma most of the time.”

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On February 9, the Post reported that the bank teller had “received serious head, eye and face injuries in the blast”.

“Her family was told after the opera­tion that her right eye was so damaged that it would have to be removed for fear that the brain and the other eye would be affected.”

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The damaged bank.
The damaged bank.
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