Google – AFP, 25 December 2013
![]() |
Image taken
on December 24, 2013 shows a soldier inspecting an
underground tunnel leading
to Hong Kong from Shenzhen in China's
Guangdong province (AFP)
|
Beijing — Chinese
smugglers dug a "professional" concrete tunnel into Hong Kong
equipped with lights, vents, steel reinforcements and even rails to transport
goods, domestic media reported on Wednesday.
The
underground path had "one end in a rented garage in Shenzhen and another
in a thicket of reeds in Hong Kong, totally concealed", said a report
posted on the official website china.com.cn.
"It
was dug in a totally professional way," it said.
Semi-autonomous
Hong Kong, along with Shenzhen in mainland China, are both important trade hubs
for the fast-growing and massive market.
But the two
have very different tariff systems.
The as-yet
unidentified smugglers sought to exploit their proximity by building a
40-metre-long (130 feet) underground passage and installing a rail track and
wagon with a block-and-tackle system to ferry goods such as cell phones and
tablet computers.
The tunnel
stood about 0.8 metres wide and 1 metre high, just big enough for an adult to
crawl through.
It started
from a remote area of Shenzhen, in a garage full of bags packed with sludge dug
up from the tunnel, and ended in a cluster of tall reeds a few metres past a
river dividing mainland China and Hong Kong, with the nearest village 20 metres
away.
The project
was estimated to have cost three million yuan ($490,000) and taken four months
to build.
Border
officers discovered the tunnel a week ago, and a nearby resident said she heard
drilling noises for one or two nights but assumed they were for renovations.
The man who
rented the garage had used a fake ID, authorities were quoted as saying.

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