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Hong Kong

Hong Kong fung shui master accused of inducing vulnerable woman to pay him HK$10m, lawsuit claims

Master induced paranoid woman to pay him HK$10 million and even promised to teach her supernatural powers in one day, writ claims

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JULIE CHU
Szeto Fat-ching
Szeto Fat-ching
A well-known fung shui master is accused of inducing a superstitious and paranoid woman to pay him more than HK$10 million over four years to perform rituals to cleanse "evil spirits".

Fung Mei-yee, 49, the daughter of a successful businessman, filed the lawsuit against Szeto Six-cheun - also known as Szeto Fat-ching, who appeared as a fung shui expert in a high-profile 2009 trial - to get her money back.

Fung, who according to the writ was educated to only Form Three level and suffered from congenital heart disease, even became a "disciple" of Szeto's and became dependent upon his advice, according to the writ. She was always superstitious and paranoid, the writ says.

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She and her three siblings had helped out in their father's paper business.

But after her older brother and sister became embroiled in a legal dispute in 2004 and her mother fell ill in 2009, she began to suspect her sister's husband had cursed the family and she approached Szeto, the writ says.

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In 2010, Fung claims Szeto saw mould in her home and suggested her family was cursed with "mould gong" - a kind of Asian black magic known as "tame head". She then paid him more than HK$4.6 million on three separate occasions to purge the "evil force" - but the mould was not cleared.

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