Chinese and Taiwanese groups use Vietnam as a venue for online betting rings in recent years
Nearly 400 Chinese detained in record Vietnam gambling bust, state media reported Sunday, July 28, in what police claim is the biggest-ever betting operation run by foreigners. Agence France-Presse (AFP) reports.
Most forms of gambling are illegal for locals in Vietnam, but the country has in recent years been used as a venue for online betting rings run by gangs from China and Taiwan.
Some 500 police officers in the northern port city of Hai Phong broke up the Chinese-run network in a raid late Saturday, July 27, on a gated community called Our City where rooms were used to transact online bets worth more than $400 million, state-run Vietnam Television said.
“This case is considered the biggest ever in terms of scale and the number of foreigners breaking laws on Vietnam’s soil,” VTV reported.
The 380 Chinese nationals fielded online wagers from Chinese punters on sports betting and ran an illegal lottery, it added.
According to the report, police also confiscated nearly 2,000 smartphones, 530 computers, bank cards and cash.
Police declined to provide additional details when asked for comment by Agence France-Presse.
Vietnam’s one-party state has started loosening its rules on domestic gambling, allowing its citizens to bet in casinos on a trial basis and opening up some sports betting.
But lucrative illegal operations have mushroomed, prompting a crackdown on domestic gambling rings.
Dozens of people were convicted in Vietnam last year in connection with an online gambling ring run by a senior official in charge of policing internet betting