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China to issue 1st national regulation on lotteries
SHANGHAI—China is expected to
issue its first national regulation on the supervision of the
fast-growing lottery industry next year to stamp out fraud, which has
been on the rise since the country launched its first lottery two
decades ago.
Legislators will draw on the experience of other countries and regions
to work out the regulation and make explicit stipulations about each
aspect of lotteries, such as the distribution, sales, announcement of
results and fund management, an official with the Legislative Affairs
Office (LAO) of the State Council said.
“Other countries and regions always make laws first before developing
the lottery industry, while China has acted to the contrary,” Ding Feng,
deputy head of LAO’s Department of Political Science and Law, Labor,
Social Security and Legislative Affairs, told a symposium held in
Shanghai. “Lack of laws and regulations on lottery supervision has
become a significant factor that has impeded the sound development of
the industry,” he said.
Lotteries have generated huge economic and social returns in China in
the past two decades. China had issued a total of 363 billion yuan (49
billion U.S. dollars) worth of lottery tickets by the end of last year,
and more than a third of the money was spent on public welfare, such as
the development of public sports facilities, education and health care
for the handicapped.
Buying lottery tickets has also given common Chinese people the chance
to get rich. Last week, a player, yet to be identified, from the
northwestern province of Gansu won the country’s largest ever individual
lottery prize of 102.7 million yuan. The winner bought 20 identical
“Double Colour Ball” tickets issued by the China Welfare Lottery at a
cost of 40 yuan.
But the industry has also encountered growing problems such as fraud and
other malpractice. Last month, a 36-year-old lottery vendor in the
northeastern Chinese city of Anshan was jailed for life for taking
advantage of a flaw in the Welfare Lottery “3D” system to cash 28
million yuan in lottery tickets illegally.
A couple of months ago, two bank employees in the northern city of
Handan were sentenced to death after being convicted of the country’s
largest ever bank theft involving 50.95 million yuan, which was spent on
lottery tickets.
In 2004, several people were found guilty of manipulating a
scratch-and-win sports lottery in northwestern city of Xi’an and were
sentenced to varying terms in prison. During the fraud incident, a
contractor of lottery tickets cheated his way to top prizes — a BMW and
120,000 yuan - by marking lottery tickets and employing four people to
falsely claim the prizes. The real lottery top prize winner Liu Liang, a
young migrant worker, finally received the prize that was due and
accepted apologies from local sports authorities. Calls for publishing
regulations or even a law on lottery supervision have been voiced
repeatedly in recent years.
At present, China has only a provisional regulation on the management of
lottery distribution and sales, which was issued by the Ministry of
Finance in 2002. “But it’s only a departmental regulation,” Ding said.
Actually, China has begun drawing up a national regulation more than a
decade ago and it has been delayed year after year due to divergences
among different government departments, such as the Ministry of Finance,
Ministry of Civil Affairs and General Administration of Sport.
Last month, four government ministries — Finance, Public Security, Civil
Affairs, Information Industry — and the General Administration of Sport
jointly launched a campaign to crack down on illegal lottery selling on
the Internet to fight lottery-related fraud.
“Internet-based illegal lottery selling is on the rise in recent years,
posing a threat to the operation of the lottery market,” said a bulletin
issued by the ministries.
The bulletin listed some of the illegal activities, such as selling
private lotteries under the name of state-run lotteries, providing
illegal channels for sports gambling and underground Mark Six and
lottery-related fraud.—Xinhua |