Three Odd Things
It's been an odd week here in Hong Kong - three odd things have happened (or are about to happen).
The first odd thing is that Hong Kong's serial dog killer, the
Bowen Road Dog Slayer, has struck again. This unknown individual has made a habit of leaving meat laced with pesticide by the side of Bowen Road, where inevitably dogs who are being walked 'off-leash' by their owners find the meat, eat it and invariably die a gruesome death. Actually, the person responsible has been doing it since 1989 and still hasn't been caught. This week four dogs have been poisoned, two of which have died.
After every reported slaying a tide of letters praising or excoriating the Slayer are published in the
local (English) paper (don't click the link - they won't let you in). The two main arguments are "dogs and their owners are filthy and get what they deserve" or "dogs are wonderful and the Slayer should be force-fed his own medicine". Meanwhile the killing continues.
The second odd thing is a great racing crime - on Wednesday morning at the
Happy Valley Racecourse an official found
explosive devices planted in the ground, just hours before Wednesday's night horse races began.
This story is great - 15 devices were planted in the ground, each located exactly where the starting gates would be for each horse. Each device was capable of launching a syringe filled with some kind of liquid into the air via a blast of compressed air.
It's such a wonderfully crazy crime - presumably the liquid would be a drug designed to hinder or help the performance of a particular horse. So if they wanted horse #3 to win, simply press the remote control marked "3", a syringe flies up out of the ground and jabs the horse in the belly, and next thing you know the horse has romped home in record time and keeps on asking for some chocolate biscuits.
Ingenious and yet impossibly stupid at the same time. You'd think that after a while people would start to notice all the horses running around with syringes hanging out of them.
The third odd thing, and it won't happen until Sunday, is that there will be an
election to decide who will be the next Chief Executive. This is very very odd, because the last two Chief Executives were elected unopposed. It's kind of tedious to go into detail but here's a brief run-down of how I understand the system works. There are about 800 people who are eligible to vote. Some of them are directly elected by sectors of the public (e.g. doctors, lawyers). The rest are appointed, which means they are acceptable to the Chinese Government and can be relied upon to vote the right way.
The previous two times no other candidate got enough nominations to run in the election, so
Beijing's choice was elected unopposed. However this time
Alan Leong, a lawyer who campaigned on a platform of universal suffrage for Hong Kong, received enough nominations to run. So on Sunday the 800 people who get to vote will actually have to make a choice.
There's no danger of
Beijing's man losing of course, but it's been an interesting few weeks here.