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HONG KONG: Hong Kong police will soon charge a man for perpetrating a recent acid attack in a busy Hong Kong shopping district, the first potential breakthrough after a spate of city-wide acid attack cases over the past year or so.
Police said they now had enough evidence to prove the 23-year-old suspect was responsible for an acid attack last month in a bustling street in Causeway Bay on Hong Kong island.
"According to testimony by the suspect and the seizure of a large amount of evidence from the suspect's home last night, we have sufficient evidence to believe the suspect carried out the crime," police superintendent Yu Tat-chung told reporters.
Hong Kong enjoys a reputation as one of Asia's safest cities, but the bizarre spate of acid attacks has put increasing pressure on local police to make a breakthrough after an extended stalemate and growing cash rewards for tipoffs. Calls have also mounted for more surveillance cameras to be installed in high-risk areas.
Yu added that the man had likely acted alone in the attack, but his motive remained unclear.
It wasn't immediately clear whether the suspect may have also masterminded a spate of other acid attacks that have targeted pedestrians in numerous districts and residential estates. Police, however, had previously indicated this possibility.
There have been at least eight acid attacks in Hong Kong since late 2008, injuring more than 100 people, most with chemical burns. None of the injuries resulted in death.
The latest attack took place in the Temple Street night market last weekend, injuring 30 people including nine tourists.