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Safety measures and stockpiled food as Yuen Long braces for march over Hong Kong violence

  • Shops and market stalls look set to close early ahead of march against mob attack that hit subway station last week
  • Fearing more clashes, some local residents are leaving the city for the weekend

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Nam Pin Wai was believed to be home to some of the men involved in Sunday’s attack. Photo: K.Y. Cheng

Yuen Long residents stockpiled food on Friday, with some even leaving Hong Kong altogether, to brace for potential clashes at protests against mob violence at the district’s subway station a week earlier.

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Fears heightened locally as police expected as many as 100,000 people to march on Saturday to denounce Sunday’s violence, even though police objected to three rallies, citing safety concerns.

Shops and public sports facilities were expected to close early while betting shops, a blood donation centre and health care centre were set to suspend services.

Some of the glass doors of a building in Nam Pin Wai, near Yuen Long MTR station, were covered by wooden boards.

Glass doors in the village were covered with wooden boards. Photo: K.Y. Cheng
Glass doors in the village were covered with wooden boards. Photo: K.Y. Cheng
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The village was believed to be home to some of the more than 100 white-clad men who beat up travellers in the station last Sunday, some of whose victims had come from a march against the government’s now-suspended extradition bill.

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