China News Service, May 8 (Xinhua) reported that a batch of suspicious objects were found in the old school building of a middle school in Aberdeen on the evening of the 7th by the Hong Kong police. Helmets, masks, gloves, blackened marks and iron nails were scattered on the scene. Steel balls do not rule out that someone has tried to detonate an explosive device at the scene. Due to the presence of suspicious chemicals at the scene, the Police Explosives Disposal Division arrived at the scene and confirmed that it was not an explosive. The case was referred to the Western District Major Investigation Team and no one was arrested.

The Hong Kong Police Explosives Disposal Division arrived at the scene. Source: Photograph by Hong Kong Wen Wei Po reporter

  The scene was the old school building of St. Peter's Middle School, Reservoir Road, Aberdeen. It was reported that the police seized a batch of suspicious chemicals at the scene. By 10 pm, the vehicle of the Police Explosives Disposal Division entered the school building and left for about 15 minutes.

  According to reports, the police confirmed that the chemical was not an explosive, but because of the blackening traces and the spread of nails and steel balls on the basketball court, helmets, gloves, masks and other equipment commonly used by black violent elements were found in the school building. The molecule used the old schoolhouse as a lair and may have experimented with some weapons.

  At 1 p.m. on May 2, Hong Kong Kowloon Bay St. Joseph ’s English Middle School abandoned a male toilet in an old school building and also found explosives and bombs loaded in paper suitcases and suitcases.

  Police found several spherical hand-throwing earth-made bombs, about 4 kg of homemade ammonium nitrate strong explosives, 5 remote-controlled explosive devices made by mobile phones and circuit boards, a pressure cooker bomb, and about 20 bottles weighing about 10 Kg of flammable or highly toxic chemicals are believed to be stolen in the laboratory of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University in November 2019. This is also the first time Hong Kong has discovered a pressure cooker bomb.