Internet news July 5, 2006

china-wrestles-with-online-gamers.jpg

Police in China’s southwestern province of Sichuan have brought down a 1 billion yuan ($125 million) soccer gambling ring, a Chinese newspaper reported on Wednesday, as World Cup betting reaches fever pitch.

Gambling has been illegal in mainland China since the Communists took power in 1949, but the country’s absence from the World Cup finals has not prevented many Chinese enjoying a flutter.

An online betting Web site set up in Hong Kong by an “underground” company and run in Sichuan’s capital Chengdu had over 2000 registered users from across the country, the Beijing News said.

On June 22, Police detained over 20 suspects involved in the syndicate, which, from July 2005, had received bets totaling over 1 billion yuan, the paper said.

Chinese police launched a major crackdown on illicit soccer betting earlier this year, but Web sites offering gambling accounts and mainland phone numbers are readily accessible despite China’s estimated 30,000-strong army of online censors.

In 2004, police broke up an online betting syndicate in southeastern Fujian province estimated to have attracted 13.6 billion yuan ($1.70 billion) in one month.

Related Articles:
  • China blogging leaps 30-fold in four years: The number of blog sites in China reached 34 million
  • China questions Google`s business license: BEIJING, China (UPI) -- Google faces new obstacles in China
  • Big push for Chinese net domains: China is ramping up creation of a parallel system of
  • Free Standards Group opens Linux lab in China: Free Standards Group Inc., a nonprofit group that promotes standards
  • Using a WAP-enabled phone: Because your phone's built-in WAP support doesn't require any extra
  • Articles:

    Leave a Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.