Euro 2004 gamblers arrested in Asia.
BANGKOK (AP) - In a crackdown on sports betting, police arrested 353 people across Thailand for gambling on Euro 2004 Cup soccer matches during the opening hours of the tournament, a spokesman said Sunday.
The suspects were arrested starting late Saturday, when the opening match between Portugal and Greece was televised locally, a police spokesman said.
Forty-five of the gamblers were apprehended in the Thai capital, Bangkok by late afternoon Sunday. Further details about the arrests were not immediately known.
The suspects, including 31 bookies will be prosecuted for gambling, Pongsapat said.
He urged authorities to use particularly harsh measures against suspects found to have been arrested for the charge more than twice before.
Although most gambling is illegal in Thailand, it is tolerated and widespread. The maximum penalty for illegal gambling is one year in prison.
Police officials said earlier they would keep a close eye on Internet activity and open a centre to halt soccer betting during the Euro 2004 Cup tournament.
European soccer is enormously popular in Thailand.
During the 2000 tournament, Bangkok police arrested 260 people for gambling and seized nearly 4 million baht ($133,000 Cdn), a police official said Thursday.
Thailand's Kasikorn Bank has estimated that local betting turnover during this year's three-week tournament could reach as high as 33 billion baht ($1.1 million Cdn).
The Canadian Press