expert attempts to disarm an improvised explosive device. On 8 July, several hundred demonstrators from the PRC, including members of the
People's Militia, crossed the border at
Sha Tau Kok and attacked Hong Kong police officers stationed nearby. The police attempted to disperse the crowd using
tear gas and
wooden bullets, prompting armed members of the crowd to open fire on the police. Five police officers were killed and eleven injured in a brief exchange of fire. The ''
People's Daily'' in Beijing ran editorials supporting the demonstrators' actions in Hong Kong; rumours that the PRC was preparing to take control of the colony began to circulate. The pro-CCP protesters in Hong Kong tried in vain to organise a
general strike in the colony. Unable to progress by peaceful means, the demonstrators resorted to more extreme measures, planting bombs, as well as decoys, throughout the city. Normal life was severely disrupted and casualties began to rise. An eight-year-old girl, Wong Yee-man, and her two-year-old brother, Wong Siu-fan, were killed by a bomb wrapped like a gift placed outside their residence.
Bomb disposal experts from the police and the
British Forces Overseas Hong Kong defused as many as 8,000
home-made bombs, of which 1,100 were found to be real. Locals nicknamed these bombs "
pineapples". Most police stations across Hong Kong were fortified with sandbags as police facilities were the target of numerous attacks using bombs, homemade fragmentation explosives, and various projectiles. The Hong Kong government imposed emergency regulations, granting the police special powers in an attempt to quell the unrest. Leftist newspapers were banned from publishing; leftist schools alleged to be bomb-making factories, such as
Chung Wah Middle School, were shut down; many pro-CCP leaders were arrested and detained; and some of them were later deported to mainland China. In response, police raided leftist strongholds, including
Kiu Kwan Mansion. Upon entering the building, the police discovered bombs and weapons, as well as a leftist "hospital" complete with dispensary and an operating theatre. The public outcry against the violence was widely reported in the media, and the demonstrators again switched tactics. On 24 August,
Lam Bun, a popular anti-communist radio commentator, was murdered by a death squad posing as road maintenance workers as he drove to work with his cousin. Lam's assailants prevented him from getting out of his car, and doused Lam and his cousin with petrol. They were both then set on fire. Lam died later that day in a hospital; Other prominent figures of the media who had voiced opposition against the riots were also threatened, including
Louis Cha, then chairman of the
Ming Pao newspaper, who consequently left Hong Kong for almost a year before returning. The waves of bombings did not subside until October 1967. In December,
Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai ordered the leftist groups in Hong Kong to stop all bombings, and the riots in Hong Kong finally came to an end after eight months. It became known much later that, during the riots, the commander of the
People's Liberation Army's
Guangzhou Military Region Huang Yongsheng (one of
Lin Biao's top allies) secretly suggested invading and occupying Hong Kong, but his plan was vetoed by Zhou Enlai. == Aftermath ==