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Updated Wednesday, February 10, 2010 10:15 am TWN, AFP China to crack down on online gamblingGambling has been outlawed in China since the Communist Party came to power in 1949, but that has not stopped a thriving underground industry. The campaign, which will last until August, will be carried out by eight government agencies including the Ministry of Public Security, central bank and the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. Online gambling “has caused large cash outflows from the country and seriously disturbed social and economic order,” said a statement posted on the public security ministry's Web site Monday. The campaign aims to “bust a number of syndicates from home and abroad that collude to organize gambling activities on the Internet and severely punish the illegal rings,” it said. Authorities will also clamp down on underground banks and third-party payment platforms that provide cash transfer services for gambling sites, as well as Internet operators that provide Web access services, it said. “(We) will clean up gambling information and websites across the board,” the statement said. The campaign is the latest in a number of steps the government has taken to strengthen control over Internet use, which is expanding at a dizzying pace in China. China has the world's largest online population with at least 384 million users, according to official figures. The government censors the Web to curb what it considers “unhealthy” content including porn and violence -- using a system known as the “Great Firewall of China.” Critics claim a primary aim of the system is to prevent the posting of information that challenges the ruling Communist Party. According to official figures, 5,394 people were arrested last year under a nationwide Internet porn crackdown, and 9,000 illegal porn-related sites were shut down. Subscribe to The China Post and save 25%. Click here |
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