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Hong KongLaw and Crime

Debt-recovery detentions rise to one a day at Macau casinos as China cracks down on illegal money flows

A gambler a day on wrong end of debt-recovery as high-rollers are cut off from mainland funds

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Casinos and hotels in Cotai, Macau.Photo: Dickson Lee
Raquel Carvalho

Beijing's crackdown on underground banking and its ongoing anti-corruption drive have sparked a dramatic rise in the number of gamblers being forcibly detained to recover debts they have run up in Macau casinos.

In the first six months of this year the number of reported illegal detentions in the world's biggest gaming destination more than doubled that of the same period in 2014.

According to figures from the Macau government, 170 people were held against their will - an average of almost one illegal detention a day. Most of the victims are understood to be from the mainland.

Read more: Macau casinos take out insurance policies after rise in hostage-taking over gambling debts

Those figures are probably just the tip of the iceberg, say casino industry watchers. They say the trend is another sign that Macau's VIP junket operators are suffering badly as the high-rolling gamblers they bring to the tables either stay away or visit casinos elsewhere in Asia to avoid falling foul of President Xi Jinping's anti-graft drive.

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Macau's Secretary for Security, Wong Sio-chak, said "most of the cases happened inside casinos, which means that these crimes will not influence the stability of Macau society".

Wong added that most of the offenders and victims were not local residents, with most coming from the mainland.

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In the first half of the year, loan-sharking cases also jumped to 153 from 110 in the same period last year.

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