Thousands arrested in global football gambling raids: Interpol
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[July 18, 2016]
BANGKOK (Reuters) - More than
4,000 people have been arrested worldwide and more than $13 million
seized across Asia in operations targeting illegal gambling during
the Euro 2016 football tournament, Interpol said on Monday.
The global police cooperation agency, which called the operation the
"most significant in recent years", said more than 4,000 raids were
carried out across China, France, Greece, Italy, Malaysia,
Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam during Operation SOGA VI (short for
soccer gambling) on dens estimated to have handled $649 million
worth of bets.
"The number of seizures is the highest and most significant amongst
similar operations in recent years. The SOGA operations are
important for tackling not just illegal gambling, but also the
organised networks behind this and other types of crime," said Chief
Superintendent Chan Lok-wing, Head of Hong Kong's Organised Crime
and Triad Bureau.
A second operation targeted transnational networks behind illegal
websites and call-center type operations, Interpol said in a
statement from Bangkok.
Reuters was not able to immediately reach Thailand's Interpol
director for comment.
The arrests come amid a record spike in illegal online gambling in
China with millions of yuan placed in bets on Euro 2016, a
side-effect of a surge in Chinese interest in global soccer.
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Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates with Ricardo Quaresma, Nani,
Rui Patricio and the trophy after winning Euro 2016 REUTERS/Carl
RecineLivepic
Portugal were crowned the Euro 2016 champions on July 10, defeating
host nation France 1-0 to win their first major championship.
(Reporting by Amy Sawitta Lefevre and Marius Zaharia; Editing by
Nick Macfie)
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