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More illegal gambling in Hong Kong as people stuck at home during coronavirus pandemic bet on winning easy money
- Thriving illegal online sites are well designed, with more options to lure gamblers, experts say
- Closure of Jockey Club betting centres, cancelled football matches drive gamblers underground
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It took a year of counselling and a lot of determination for Chris to beat his gambling habit a decade ago. The Hongkonger had to sell his flat to clear a mountain of debt, and almost lost his marriage too.
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Then the Covid-19 pandemic struck and the 37-year-old owner of a tourism company watched his income dry up with global restrictions on travel.
The financial pressure triggered his old urge to try and make easy money. Unable to travel to the casinos in Macau, he started going to an illegal gambling den last October, playing the popular card games Texas Hold’Em poker and baccarat.
“I wanted to win big,” says Chris, who is married with a son, 15, and daughter, 13, and did not want his full name revealed.
Instead of winning, he lost tens of thousands of Hong Kong dollars over a matter of months.
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The pandemic, with its restrictions on social interaction and job losses, has led Hongkongers to gamble more for entertainment and to make money, and many have turned to illegal gambling.
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